-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
30/40 krag identification help
I need some advice about a 2 30/40 krags. I would like to know what to value it at and is it original or has there been any modifications to it. Is it a carbine as some people have told me. Thanks in advance.
Gun 1 is 25252** serial number
Gun 2 is 93** serial number
Information
|
Warning: This is a relatively older thread This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current. |
|
-
01-07-2017 10:05 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Advisory Panel
Welcome to the forum. The whole serial number is required to be clear as to manufacture date or details. No one's going to claim your rifle is stolen, or theirs... Both guns have been radically altered and are worth shooters prices as hunting rifles.
-
Thank You to browningautorifle For This Useful Post:
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
9394
2525278
Thanks
Any idea what year they were made and what alterations were done to them?
Last edited by Foxx9914; 01-07-2017 at 10:26 AM.
-
Advisory Panel
I don't have any info on the years they were made. I can tell you I have no hits in the SRS book on either of them. Both started(by my info) as rifles and the first one has had the stock cut back. The second seems to have a carbine stock and front band. Unless it has a 22" barrel, it's a cut down barrel, immaterial because of the front sight job done...
-
Thank You to browningautorifle For This Useful Post:
-
Legacy Member
'Foxx9914' - Both of your Krags are cut-down rifles. (Original barrel length was 30 inches). They are worth about $200-275 (USD) for parts and utility value. Such Krags do not sell very well these days.
#9394 started out as a U.S. model 1892 rifle. It was likely assembled between December, 1894 and February, 1895. (This is before the U.S. had a Krag carbine).
I can't really be sure, because your photos do not show the right-side of the stock. However, it may be in a later type of model 1896 carbine replacement stock. This stock came out around 1900, for rebuilding model 1896 carbines into a configuration similar to the model 1899 carbine. The barrel-band is an 1899 carbine band. Your rear sight is a 1901 rifle sight, put on backwards. (Springfield Armory did not create your 'MixMaster' of parts. "TFN" likely did it to make a 'Hunting Rifle').
#2525278 is an impossible number for a U.S. Krag. Fewer than 500,000 Krags were made at Springfield and the highest serial numbers are probably in 480XXX range. You've given too many digits!
Assuming your model 1898 Krag is in the 25XXXX range, it was likely assembled between March and May of 1900. This was built as a rifle. The 24 1/2 inch barrel is obviously a cut-down rifle barrel. (Carbine barrels were only 22 inches long and carbines made during and after 1899 are marked 'model 1899').
The stock of this Krag is a shortened rifle stock, (with a rifle butt sling-swivel). Your rear-sight is the 1902 rifle sight. Your front sight base appears to be a Krag base that has been re-shaped and crudely brazed or welded on. This Krag has had its magazine cut-off lever removed.
I am not bashing your Krags. I just accept that many Krags were made into economy hunting arms and are not 'rare carbines'. There is a lot of 'Blarney' thrown about concerning Krags, especially at Gun Shows!
Last edited by butlersrangers; 01-08-2017 at 12:55 AM.
-
Thank You to butlersrangers For This Useful Post:
-
Advisory Panel
If you have a carbine stock there...it could be the best value of the whole deal. I'd actually change the front sights to 1903 sights so they look a but better. The welding could have caused the front end to banana a bit upwards so I'd also trim and crown. Not much more can be done, if they shoot then they're fine.
-