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Legacy Member
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01-19-2011 09:30 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
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Legacy Member
Sounds good enough. Pics would be a big help though. What's the asking price?
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Legacy Member
We're somewhere in the $250 to $300 range now. IF, he is willing to sell it.
I will get the camera out and take a couple pictures soon.
Hank
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Legacy Member
A Russian
capture? Sounds like it. Price is Ok at $250.00. Have you looked down the barrel? It must be nice or I would pass.
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Contributing Member
The price sounds like a Russian
Capture but not the description other than the missing cleaning rod.
Russian captures have been re-worked and re-built. Would have a nicely blued finish, probably an X on the receiver and a serial number stamped on the butt stock on the outside. Few numbers (stamped) would match but there will be electropenciled numbers on the major parts that would match the barrel serial number. They are usually missing the cleaning rod, the front sight protector and the small outside retaining screws on the bottom of the magazine. Will probably have a purple/red shellac on the stock.
A rifle with little to no bluing and no import stamp stands a good chance of not being a Russian Capture but this is something you want to be sure of. If all the numbers match and there are a lot of parts with numbers on there, I've seen one sell locally here at auction in excess of $800. There are fake all matching number rifles too. For the price, doesn't sound like you could go wrong in any case, worst case being it's an RC.
---------- Post added at 10:30 PM ---------- Previous post was at 10:24 PM ----------
The stock finish has a RC look to it and it is missing it's front sight protector but the metal finish does not look RC.
Almost every metal part should have at a minimum the last two digits of the SN on them.
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Legacy Member
I have done a little work with older military items but mostly US so I have a fairly good feel for things that have been changed or refurbished. I did have a RC P-38 pistol and I see nothing on this rifle that resembles the markings on the pistol. There are no electropenciling's, peening, or forced numbers.
my delima is ----is the lack of metal finish off-set by what I see as a matching number rifle..and still what is a fair price....
And, thanks for the replies...
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Contributing Member
First, I'm no expert on these at all. I have an RC and other than researching that a bit, that's about all I know other than what I see them selling for.
The metal condition looks like a lot of the bring backs I've seen. Not sure why, whether it was simply hard use during the war or poor storage all these years so that isn't always an issue with the price.
Part of the attraction of the RC for me is that I'm not a hard core collector. I like nice looking rifles rather than historical wall hangers that are too risky to shoot for harming their value in some way. So I don't see paying a huge premium for what to me looks like an abused rifle. Just my personal preference. If I had a lot more money than I do, I might look at the historical pieces more closely.
From the pics, I'd say it's worth his asking price unless the bore is shot out.
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Advisory Panel
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
pastprime
ggm over 41 on buttplate
??
Please check. It could be gqm. My reason for asking is:
ggm was a supplier of ammunition components (less likely) - F.Ulrich & Söhne, Annweiler
gqm was a supplier of magazines and gun components (more likely) - Lock & Hardenberger, Idar-Oberstein
---------- Post added at 10:40 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:37 AM ----------

Originally Posted by
pastprime
is the lack of metal finish
- which rather speaks for un-"improved" originality!
Look at the dings on the stock. Unblemished metal finish would be a sign of "improvement" (metal finish not matching wear & tear state of wood finish)
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