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Legacy Member
1908 Brazil 7mm
Nothing in life is so exhilarating as to be shot at without result.
- Winston Churchill
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07-12-2012 12:13 AM
# ADS
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For some reason, I've always preferred the earlier model. But they don't show up in almost new condition very often any more.
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Advisory Panel
The photo illustrates very well the difference in profile between the older "slim-line" Chilean and the slightly plumper Brazilian
- which I find a very comfortable rifle to shoot.
---------- Post added at 11:23 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:18 AM ----------

Originally Posted by
alamo308
Is it possible to have too many?
The usual problems are too little: time, money and space
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I just do not recall many nice Brazilian
M98's. I have seen piles of beaters, but you found a keeper.
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1895 Chilean
Despite it's age, it is the best shooting rifle I have ever enjoyed. Check to make sure it was not a restamped OVS rifle as some of the Boer rifles were diverted to Chile
. This would command a significantly higher value.!
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1895 Chilean and 1908 Brazilian 7mm
Thanks for all the positive comments. These really are some nice-looking examples. The pictures do not do them justice. Did I mention they are both all-matching s/n and mirror-bright, clean bores?
I have both rifles and several selections of ammo (the WW2 FN, some commercial "Frontier" brand, and my reloads) ready to head to the range tomorrow morning, Friday, if the weather holds. A nice way to start the weekend. Range opens at 10AM. I plan to start at 100 yards to see how close the front sights windages are (and adjust sight picture accordingly), and then - maybe - move to the 200- and 300-yard berms. Report to follow...
Nothing in life is so exhilarating as to be shot at without result.
- Winston Churchill
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Thank You to alamo308 For This Useful Post:
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Calif-Steve
I just do not recall many nice
Brazilian
M98's. I have seen piles of beaters, but you found a keeper.
No surprise, since the Brazilian model was the M1908, not the Gew. 98! I agree, most of the Gew. 98s one sees are pretty beaten up, thanks to WW1, but the M1908s are frequently in "arsenal mint" condition. A large number were imported to Germany
in as-new condition, and were available with matching bayonets in their scabbards!
Last edited by Patrick Chadwick; 07-13-2012 at 09:19 AM.
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Those are nice, baby! I picked up an '08 Brazil
a few years ago. It is a "B" gun, but really shoots well. What you have are collector grade.
jn
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Got to the range!
Nothing in life is so exhilarating as to be shot at without result.
- Winston Churchill
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Legacy Member
I saw a pile of Brazilian
barreled receivers 1-2 years ago. All in .30-'06 and in poor condition. Perhaps 200(?) or more. Not a single 7mm in the pile. Really mint Brazilian Mausers likely never left the depot where they were stored in 1908. Nice find today.
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