Unconfigured Ad Widget

Collapse

1938 Mauser

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Tonymin
    Senior Member
    • Mar 2013
    • 768

    1938 Mauser

    Ok I was not in the market yet so have done little research. But I was at this store yesterday and they had this Mauser I can't stop thinking about. I was dragged out of the store by my daughter so didn't take proper pics of markings.
    The tag said 8 mm Mauser. The receiver said 1938. But in the picture it looks longer than K98 Mausers I see on the internet.
    It was gorgeous, just the right amount of patina I like.
    Does this picture help at all in somewhat identifying it?
    Tag said $495
    Thanks for any help or guesses.

    sigpic
    Looking for locally for sale Nagant revolver
  • #2
    Emdawg
    Veteran Member
    • Jan 2012
    • 4292

    That is most likely a K.Kale M1938 from Turkey.


    I think $500 is expensive for one.


    Here
    *sniff* *sniff* Commies...

    Comment

    • #3
      Tonymin
      Senior Member
      • Mar 2013
      • 768

      I googled the K.Kale M1938 and it appears to have a straight bolt. This one has a bent bolt? Did they come both ways?
      sigpic
      Looking for locally for sale Nagant revolver

      Comment

      • #4
        justin4fun
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2011
        • 601

        from what I can tell Emdawg has got it. it looks like a straight bolt in the pic too. I recommend staying away from that store as they are unfriendly and are known for lies high prices and excellent customer no service. you can find one cheaper. Good luck

        Comment

        • #5
          Tonymin
          Senior Member
          • Mar 2013
          • 768

          I stopped by on my way back from my daughter's soccer game. I didn't talk to anyone about it. Loved the Mauser action and look. Had the feeling it was overpriced plus am about to send in CMP Garand order so would have bought it only if special or cheap.
          A Mauser is on the list though but would prefer a German one to complete my WW2 rifle collection.
          sigpic
          Looking for locally for sale Nagant revolver

          Comment

          • #6
            Bobby Ricigliano
            Mit Gott und Mauser
            CGN Contributor
            • Feb 2011
            • 17439

            $500 for a Turkish Mauser = No

            Comment

            • #7
              Bobby Ricigliano
              Mit Gott und Mauser
              CGN Contributor
              • Feb 2011
              • 17439

              The rifle in the pic has a straight bolt. This can be determined by the fact that the bolt in the picture is protruding away from the receiver in a straight line.

              Comment

              • #8
                Tonymin
                Senior Member
                • Mar 2013
                • 768

                I will hold out for German. Thanks guys. It was first time I touched a Mauser of any kind and liked it. At the time I thought it was German. It shows to always do your research before buying.
                Back to dreaming of the impending arrival of my Garand...
                sigpic
                Looking for locally for sale Nagant revolver

                Comment

                • #9
                  Crunch130
                  Senior Member
                  • Aug 2010
                  • 750

                  That is definitely a Turk M1938 with a straight bolt. When the importers had gobs of them in stock 10-15 years ago, even more than the way they have gobs of Mosin 91/30's now, they were selling as cheap as $50 each.

                  Most of those M1938's typically have pretty worn-out barrels and excessive headspace. They must have been used as training rifles with corrosive ammo for a very long time. Guys bought them because they were CHEAP.

                  Some of them have good bores and are in decent shape and worth cleaning up. IF that's one of those, I would say $200. Some even had nice tigerstriped walnut stocks.

                  Over the years, military Mausers ended up being built in Germany, Sweden, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Poland, Spain, China, Belgium, Turkey, and I'm probably forgetting a country or two.

                  The point of that is learn to ID the different models and have some clue about their rarity and collectability before you shell out $500 for one. Some are worth much more, and some much less. ASSUME that the guy in the gunshop either knows less about them than you do (unless the place specializes in old military rifles) OR he's "playing dumb" to headfake you into paying too much. TRUST ME, I've seen it many times. I say all this about the other countries to help inform other new collectors, given that you specifically want a German one. The best bet these days for a good condition Mauser at a reasonable price is a Yugo manufactured M24/47 or an M48, or a Yugo-reworked German K98. Prices should start around $300.

                  German K98's can be had as a Russian Capture starting at $400 to $500 these days, or an original for a lot more than that. Be wary, because many faked matching guns are out there (en mass courtesy of Mitchell's Mausers), or rifles called "vet bringbacks" that really weren't. Buy the rifle, not the story. A pre-1968 import (no import marks) is often advertised as vet bringback.

                  Regards,
                  Crunch
                  Last edited by Crunch130; 02-02-2014, 1:11 PM.
                  "The fate of unborn millions will now depend, under God, on the courage and conduct of this army"- General George Washington July 2, 1776

                  Comment

                  • #10
                    Hardwarejunkie
                    Senior Member
                    • Nov 2009
                    • 840

                    I agree, way too much for a Turk.
                    The ones I seen recently were in the $200 to $250 range.
                    When it comes to patina though, the Turks I've seen/own have that in spades.
                    I think Weidner's has some shooter grade Germans and some Yugo's, Samco has Yugo's and some Swedes.

                    Comment

                    • #11
                      Gavelek
                      Senior Member
                      • Dec 2012
                      • 1275

                      200 most, nice picture though

                      Comment

                      • #12
                        knucklehead0202
                        Veteran Member
                        • Aug 2008
                        • 4086

                        turk mausers are nice, but that's about twice what it should cost. a year or two ago they were like 120 bucks at the gun show, back when you could still buy things at the show....

                        Comment

                        • #13
                          6mmintl
                          Veteran Member
                          • Apr 2008
                          • 4822

                          I was going to offer you a 98/29 Persian Mauser but you mentioned you wanted a rifle with "Patna", mine is "as new" with no rust, I mean "Patina".

                          I do have an 88-05 commission rifle in 8x57mm for $250 with lots of patina (grease/cosmoline/yak fat/rust/dirt ) for $250

                          Comment

                          • #14
                            Discogodfather
                            CGN Contributor
                            • Feb 2010
                            • 5516

                            Interesting how the Turks used the model 1896, if you squint you can see a Swedish Mauser.

                            Which is what I would buy if I had a $500 budget for a Mauser.
                            Originally posted by doggie
                            Someone must put an end to this endless bickering by posting the unadulterated indisputable facts and truth.
                            Originally posted by PMACA_MFG
                            Not checkers, not chess, its Jenga.
                            "The California matrix of gun control laws is among the harshest in the nation and are filled with criminal law traps for people of common intelligence who desire to obey the law." - U.S. District Judge Roger T. Benitez

                            Comment

                            • #15
                              Bobby Ricigliano
                              Mit Gott und Mauser
                              CGN Contributor
                              • Feb 2011
                              • 17439

                              Originally posted by Crunch130
                              That is definitely a Turk M1938 with a straight bolt. When the importers had gobs of them in stock 10-15 years ago, even more than the way they have gobs of Mosin 91/30's now, they were selling as cheap as $50 each.

                              Most of those M1938's typically have pretty worn-out barrels and excessive headspace. They must have been used as training rifles with corrosive ammo for a very long time. Guys bought them because they were CHEAP.

                              Some of them have good bores and are in decent shape and worth cleaning up. IF that's one of those, I would say $200. Some even had nice tigerstriped walnut stocks.

                              Over the years, military Mausers ended up being built in Germany, Sweden, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Poland, Spain, China, Belgium, Turkey, and I'm probably forgetting a country or two.

                              The point of that is learn to ID the different models and have some clue about their rarity and collectability before you shell out $500 for one. Some are worth much more, and some much less. ASSUME that the guy in the gunshop either knows less about them than you do (unless the place specializes in old military rifles) OR he's "playing dumb" to headfake you into paying too much. TRUST ME, I've seen it many times. I say all this about the other countries to help inform other new collectors, given that you specifically want a German one. The best bet these days for a good condition Mauser at a reasonable price is a Yugo manufactured M24/47 or an M48, or a Yugo-reworked German K98. Prices should start around $300.

                              German K98's can be had as a Russian Capture starting at $400 to $500 these days, or an original for a lot more than that. Be wary, because many faked matching guns are out there (en mass courtesy of Mitchell's Mausers), or rifles called "vet bringbacks" that really weren't. Buy the rifle, not the story. A pre-1968 import (no import marks) is often advertised as vet bringback.

                              Regards,
                              Crunch
                              /thread

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              UA-8071174-1