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Rifle Stamping |
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History Preserved with the German
K98 Infantry Rifle
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Mitchell’s Mausers
announces the finding of a rare cache of near-new
K98k Mauser rifles that survived the destruction of
Nazi Germany. Even some special model variations
that were produced during WWII are included: rare
Nazi factory codes with year code markings, early
pre-war Mausers with the famous Mauser ‘Banner’
marking, rare concentration camp rifles, and
specially marked “SS” Gestapo rifles. Some K98
sniper rifles complete with the original scope are
also available in limited numbers..
The Nazi’s marked every rifle with a secret factory
code, a date code, and military inspection stamps
with proof marks, depending on where the rifle was
made. Many Mauser rifles were built in captured
factories in Belgium (Browning) and in the former
Czechoslovakia (CZ Brno); now the Czech Republic in
addition to rifles intended for other countries. The
‘bnz’ code with the single (Gestapo) rune and the
“41” code on the receiver shown here say that this
rifle was built in 1941 at the Nazi concentration
camp in Steyr, Austria, which was supervised by the
infamous SS. Inspection team number 135 used the
Weimar Eagle inspection stamp shown here and worked
in the original Mauser factory from 1942 to 1945. |
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The Nazi Eagle,
both with and without an associated inspector
number, appears on rifles produced in the Nazi era.
These two marking types are found stamped on various
individual parts depending on when and in which
factory the rifle was manufactured.
The Totenkopf (Death’s Head) was affixed to a small
number of rifles that were intended for use by
special ‘SS’ troops. The mark shown here was stamped
on the barrel on the left side immediately ahead of
the receiver. The Deaths Head was sometimes applied
to the underside of the stock immediately behind the
trigger guard in the underside of the pistol grip.
Of special interest are some sniper rifles that have
the original long-eye-relief system; the famous
ZF-41 models with the long-eye-relief scope mount
built into the rear sight base. Some sniper rifle
models have high-turret mounts and while others have
the German long claw-type mounts’. The long-claw
type is shown here.
All rifles have been factory overhauled and
preserved in military storage since mid-1945. Now to
comply with U.S. insurance regulations, all rifles
are torn-down, re-examined, cleaned and tested for
fit, function, appearance and completeness. All
rifles are provided with American Owner’s Manuals
that include all the required U.S. Government
safety-warnings.
Separately, American reprints of original German
Mauser Operators Manual and separate Soldier’s
Training Manuals for K98’s dated 1936 are available.
Original German accessories that were intended to be
issued with the rifles during WWII are also at hand.
Mauser rifles are prized the world over for their
strength, reliability and legendary accuracy. When
the historical pedigree of these particular rifles
is considered, they become doubly valuable. Over
time prices will go up. Right now the basic
Collector Grade German Mauser is available for $499.
Other models are individually priced. Mitchell
highly recommends getting the K98k now, while
selection and availability are good.
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Get the PDF Press Release for the German
K98 Mauser |
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Get the
Adobe |
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Acrobat
Reader here! |
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For Sales and
Information... Call Now! 1-800-274-4124 |
Model Number
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Description
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Price |
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K98-018 |
German K98 Rifle, Service Grade with German Markings from WWII |
299.00 |
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K98-025 |
German K98 Rifle, Collector Grade with German Markings from WWII |
499.00 |
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K98-027 |
German K98 Rifle, Premium Grade with German Markings from WWII |
699.00 |
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K98-900 |
Special Factory Code and Year Code (Most codes are available)
Selection search charge. |
100.00 |
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