Ok, basic story. I was given a Swedish38 short rifle the other day. It is in bad shape. I have cleaned the rust off of it at present and am in need of options. The pitting is bad enough that it may be hazardous to fire yet the bore and the action are in pretty good shape. The stock has dry rot for the first six or so inches and has already broken off.
My hope was to restore this to function using as many of the original parts that I could. If I could do that, I'd probably fill the holes, park and paint it, repair the stock etc.
My concern is obviously safety first. Is the barrel pitted too bad to be safe, would it be accurate after more than a few shots as it heats up an starts bending due to the pitting and uneven heat exchange (not sure it would to this, just asking).
I thought, and here is the sacrilege part, that if it is not salvageable as is, I could cut the barrel down to just longer than legal length, cut the stock back to the second barrel band and make a tanker's carbine out of it. I'm not too concerned with the pitting in that portion of the barrel. It's there, it isn't good but I've seen some Nagants pitted like that and that is a hotter round that the 6.5. I have no idea how accurate something like that would be, how far the flames would fly or what type of front sight to put on it.
Anyway, I have a couple of dozen photos of this rifle on the Restoration Forum if you'd care to look and offer opinions.
I don't like the wall hanger idea, someone, someday could take it and shoot it if I made it "pretty" by covering it up.
And yes, I could get another barrel, another stock, another cleaning rod, a pair of barrel band springs and a bayonet lug and barrel band. But by then I could have bought another rifle that was intact and in no need of cosmetic repairs.
1941 Swedish Mauser needs a LOT of helpInformation
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