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Barrel code help
Getting this as a replacement barrel for a really cheap price. However I am not fluent in the language of barrel codes. It devoid of other markings than this one. Thanks for any insight.
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09-10-2011 12:02 AM
# ADS
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The "49" is : theGerman WW-II Heerswaffenamt inspector's mark on assigned to Erma Werke, Erfurt, Germany. Don't know much else.
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According to Backbone of the Wehrmacht by Richard Law, on page 83, "DO" is one of the many unknown barrel maker codes and as the barrels are often subcontracted out, the inspector proofs can't really tell us much... Such is the life for the mauser collector
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if it's an Israeli barrel, you should check that it's still in original 7.92x57mm caliber and wasn't reworked to be 7.62x51mm
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The one on it currently is 7.62 nato. I'm putting on a 7.92 barrel. Sorry for the lack of clarification on that.
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That bbl is off of a 337 code 1939 rifle. That is the only time that WaA proof shows up on K98k rifles. However, if there is no ser nrs on the bbl it may well be a replacemet bbl sent to some rebuild facility.
I would also question that being an SS contrakt receiver.
Sarge
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BNZ is Steyr Daimler Puch which was staffed largely out of local area concentration camps. Similar to this is BCD, the Gustloff Werks which was built at Buchenwald and operated there until the British bombed it in April of 1944. In reality, the later the war got on, the more and more parts that are subject to being 'SS' contracts. In reality, they aren't so much contracts but more appropriately, they are parts made under SS supervision which more often than not translates into weapons made at labour camps. Rifles made at BNZ are therefore likely to have been built by slave labour but that DOES NOT mean they are SS rifles. One must remember that as much as they tried, they could not manufacture enough to completely supplement their forces. As a general rule, unless otherwise noted, rifle without any SS issue markings are not considered to be SS rifles per se. For example, on the inside of my buttplate on the stock of my DOT 1944, are SS runes and a rack or supply number. Does that mean this rifle was SS issued? Probably not, but it does tell me that it is possible and indeed likely that atleast the buttstock may have come out the labour system which was often farmed out to create individual components for rifles and the like.
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BNZ is Steyr Daimler Puch which was staffed largely out of local area concentration camps.
Mauthausen to be exact
As a general rule, unless otherwise noted, rifle without any SS issue markings are not considered to be SS rifles per se.
true, but this is not really the case with the large font "bnz 44" rifles. if they have no letter suffix on the serial number, they are widely considered to have been from the first 10,000 of 1944 and the last of SS contract rifles
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Oh so much to learn. Bsides the obvious whats the difference with the font size?
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