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Salu2 a to2
Bizio
FISAT Life Member & NRA Life Member
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12-02-2013 11:03 AM
# ADS
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Yup, after seeing your excellent close-up pics of the bolt face and shroud, I agree with Sarge13 that unfortunately, these have been scrubbed and renumbered ... 
Reduces value considerably ...
Regards,
Doug
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IMHO it has really a very law value.
I would prefer a rifle with a different numbered bolt but *original* rather than scrubbled and renumbered to make it matching.
I will return the rifle and will be refunded without problems.
Salu2 a to2
Bizio
FISAT Life Member & NRA Life Member
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Legacy Member
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I think the rifle is all original except for the bolt of course...
I believe what's happened, as happened a lot with K98k
's, is that the original bolt got separated from the rifle and whatever replacement bolt was used to make it operable, created a miss-match.
So, some enterprising gun hustler decided to be creative and faked a matching real K98k bolt to "up" its value. 
Other than that, it's a really nice looking 1938 Oberndorf manufactured rifle ...
Regards,
Doug
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Thank You to Badger For This Useful Post:
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I agree with you, Badger.
In Italy
the value of a mismatched Mauser K98
is about 400-500 euro.
The value of a fully matching Mauser K98 is about 1000-1200 euro.
So whoever did the dirty job earned the difference between the two prices.
---------- Post added at 06:45 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:40 PM ----------
Also the bolt catch lever is not original.
It brings a different Waffenamt from the original WaA63 : WaA 214, same year but different manufacturer.
Salu2 a to2
Bizio
FISAT Life Member & NRA Life Member
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Advisory Panel
There are folks who excel at doing that over here too. Caveat Emptor. They even weld up the old numbers before they finish and restamp them. Some are very hard to detect.
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There are folks who excel at doing that over here too. Caveat Emptor. They even weld up the old numbers before they finish and restamp them. Some are very hard to detect.
In Italy
the "Caveat Emptor" rule does'nt work.
Erasing, restamping serial numbers in order to increase the value of a rifle and earn more money than due it is considered a fraud, a crime (Art. 640 C.P.)
Salu2 a to2
Bizio
FISAT Life Member & NRA Life Member
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Advisory Panel
As it should be really. There used to be a guy here in the southeast USA
that excelled at renumbering bolts and barrel bands. It finally got to a point that I wouldn't even look at his rifles anymore although he had the odd honest rifle mixed in.
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