Mitchell Mauser

Prof Young

New member
Local range/lgs has a Mitchell Mauser for $900. (See pics below. Yeah, I should have taken more.) Anyway it's pretty well used but I can still see the rifling. The bolt hangs up on the follower when you try to close it without any ammo in place. Is that normal? It has a sling and what looks to be an original bayonet.
Talk to me please.

Life is good.
Prof Young
 

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mikejonestkd

New member
Agreeing with Shane, mitchells are usually refurbished parts guns, hastily assembled, given a patina to look matching, and then remarked with fake stamps.

Avoid at all costs
 

Ricklin

New member
Better choices

Direct your browser over to an auction site or two. You can do far better than a Mitchell's.

They put much effort into looking good. And that's all.
 

Prof Young

New member
Thanks.

Thanks for the warnings. I kind of figured that this one is over priced and I already knew the numbers didn't match. If they lower the price some I may look again.

Life is good.
Prof Young
 

ericuda

New member
I am more curious, inherited a mauser myself. Marked m48 on top of receiver and hpj with foreign letters followed by 44 on left side. Mine has matching k130## on bolt, receiver and base plate. Has same number stamped on stock. Has leather sling and a bag of miscellaneous parts with oil can, etc.

I loaded some reduced h4895 loads and it is kinda fun.
 

44 AMP

Staff
Mitchell's Mausers were $300 overpriced when they were priced at $400.
$900 is just barking stupid, and so is anyone who pays that.

They have a reputation for force matching parts, and remarking parts to make them APPEAR to be original and pricing their "frankenmausers" as if they were all original and I will not have anything to do with any of their guns.

Unless you give me one at no cost, but if Mitchell is getting even penny one out of it, they're not getting it from me.
 

JT-AR-MG42

New member
The bolt hangs up on the follower when you try to close it without any ammo in place. Is that normal?

Yes, the rear end of the follower rib is squared on the military German WWII 98 to prevent you
from inadvertently (as in the noise and confusion of combat) closing the bolt on an empty chamber.

I also agree with the others that you should be able to pick up a RC 98 for less than 900.

JT
 

jdc606

New member
I am more curious, inherited a mauser myself. Marked m48 on top of receiver and hpj with foreign letters followed by 44 on left side. Mine has matching k130## on bolt, receiver and base plate. Has same number stamped on stock. Has leather sling and a bag of miscellaneous parts with oil can, etc.

I loaded some reduced h4895 loads and it is kinda fun.

You have a Yugo M48. A quick internet search will give you more info than I could ever provide. I have one and agree they are kinda fun.
 

44 AMP

Staff
The bolt hangs up on the follower when you try to close it without any ammo in place. Is that normal?

Sorry, I forgot to answer this earlier. As JT-AR-MG42 said, this is completely normal. Military Mausers (and some other rifles) are made to "lock open" when empty. Its done to tell you that the gun is empty in a way that's hard to miss. :D

Tis the equivalent of your semi auto pistol slide or rifle bolt locking back when empty. It's also one of the things done away with when sporterizing the rifle. I've done several myself. A few minutes with a file (or a bit less time with a bench grinder) cutting the square shoulder at the rear of the magazine follower into a slope allows the bolt to be easily closed over an empty magazine.

I've had a lot of 98 pattern rifles over the years, both military trim and sporterized. Currently still have a Kar 98k, a rather "war weary" veteran with the stamped winter triggerguard, a VZ-24 in pretty good shape and a Yugo 48 that looks like new.

One thing to remember when shooting them, assume all 8mm surplus military ammo is corrosive primed, and clean the gun accordingly.
 
The M48 is a Czech-made rifle produced after the end of WW2. They are basically a Mauser design, but they are slightly different from the 98s, the K98s, and the 24s (and 24/47s) in that the bolt is slightly shorter, so there is no parts interchange between the M48 series and the other, military Mausers. Ten or so years ago M48s with all matching numbers were selling for under $200. As someone posted above, $900 for one of Mitchell's reworked wonders is stupid.
 

EIGHTYDUECE

New member
The M48 is a Czech-made rifle produced after the end of WW2. They are basically a Mauser design, but they are slightly different from the 98s, the K98s, and the 24s (and 24/47s) in that the bolt is slightly shorter, so there is no parts interchange between the M48 series and the other, military Mausers. Ten or so years ago M48s with all matching numbers were selling for under $200. As someone posted above, $900 for one of Mitchell's reworked wonders is stupid.

The M48 is Yugoslavian. The Yugoslavian 24/47 is a Czech Mauser rebuilt in Yugoslavia. The M48 is a very nice Mauser variant. Although it is called an M48, they were actually manufactured in the early 1950s for export. I agree with going with an original M48 over the Mitchell's. The M48 also has a teak stock.
 

FrankenMauser

New member
Mitchells are typically refinished, force-matched parts guns that are made to look good and original, but are far from it.
Don't go there, unless you just want something that's nice to look at.
And that one... That one does not seem nice to look at.
The M48 is a Czech-made rifle produced after the end of WW2. They are basically a Mauser design, but they are slightly different from the 98s, the K98s, and the 24s (and 24/47s) in that the bolt is slightly shorter, so there is no parts interchange between the M48 series and the other, military Mausers.
The M48 is Yugoslavian. The Yugoslavian 24/47 is a Czech Mauser rebuilt in Yugoslavia. The M48 is a very nice Mauser variant. Although it is called an M48, they were actually manufactured in the early 1950s for export. I agree with going with an original M48 over the Mitchell's. The M48 also has a teak stock.
Further correction is required here.
24/47s were both rebuilds of FN 1924 (FN24) pattern rifles, as well as newly-manufactured.
M48s were both refurbs and newly manufactured.

FN24 pattern rifles were built by over a dozen different countries, with a huge number of them ending up in Yugoslavia at the end of their life, or after the war. The Serbs did not shy away from used rifles that cost pennies on the dollar, versus building from scratch. While a lot of the FN24s were Czech built, the majority were not. In fact, the majority of Yugo 1924s were Belgian-made, by FN.

FN24 pattern production was always for military contracts. But 24/47 and M48 production did see some runs done specifically for export - with some fully intended to be sold on the civilian market.

The entire FN1924 family is short, not just the M48s. 1924, 24/47, M48, and a few specialty rifles in between. They use slightly shorter actions and shorter bolts (the "intermediate length" Mauser).
Unless the action had one or more rare modifications done, 1924, 24/47, and M48 bolts are interchangeable - often even for rifles produced in different countries, 30 years apart.


The rifle pictured isn't any of the above, though.
It's a German 98. With over-stamped Waffenamts.
(**cough** probably by Mitchell's **cough**)
 

Ricklin

New member
Frankenmauser does that shortened bolt also apply to the early 1950's commercial Mauser actions?
I have a JC Higgins model 50 in .270 Win that I dearly love. Sears had Hi-Standard build the rifles, the action was FN Mauser. I believe it was made around 1952
 

FrankenMauser

New member
There was commercial production or conversion of intermediate length actions after WWII. Heym*, Montgomery Wards* (I don't know who built these), and many brands supplied by Zastava* were all intermediate length.

*All of these, specifically, were at least partially based on M48("BO") export actions; but others easily could have been 24/47(BO), reconstituted surplus, or new manufacturer from elsewhere - like the FN Model 30.
 

Mk VII

New member
Jerry Kuhnhausen's Mauser book has a table, with dimensions, of the various actions over the years, long/short/intermediate, small ring/large ring etc.
 

Vinootz

New member
Not a problem

I never had a problem with a Mitchell’s Mauser. I bought one to decorate a room with. It shoots great too. Lots of negativity out there. When you look at the cheap grade of materials folks get in a rifle for $300 today, I figure I did ok. Besides, Mitchell’s is allowed to make money for producing a cleaned up firearm that shoots. I guess many gun owners are frugal considering all the gripes you hear.
 

5whiskey

New member
I never had a problem with a Mitchell’s Mauser. I bought one to decorate a room with. It shoots great too. Lots of negativity out there. When you look at the cheap grade of materials folks get in a rifle for $300 today, I figure I did ok. Besides, Mitchell’s is allowed to make money for producing a cleaned up firearm that shoots. I guess many gun owners are frugal considering all the gripes you hear.

If you aren’t a collector, and have no interest in historical accuracy, then a mitchels Mauser is fine. They’re overpriced, but there’s nothing wrong with it if you were ok with the price and liked the look of the firearm. They *DO* clean up a mauser fairly well from what I understand.

The issue is, most people who are interested in Mauser rifles are collectors. Prices increase with known original rifles that are still in good shape, increase more when all parts are numbers matching, then increases more when there is no importer stamp (or the stamp is discreet or concealed), and then increases even more when all or most of the original rifle kit is included (I.e. the Mauser cleaning rod is present, comes with an original sling or bayonet, etc).

Mitchels gets a bad rap among collectors because they try to “force match” parts. Force matching is when an identical serial number is stamped on all parts by Mitchell’s in their refurbishing process. This gives the appearance, on the surface, that the rifle is an original all numbers matching rifle. It is also fraudulent if it is advertised as numbers matching.

What makes it worse is Mitchell’s charges a similar price for one of its cobbled parts guns as what you would pay for an original numbers matching Mausers in passable shape. A Mitchell’s Mauser will not go up in value. An original, numbers matching, K98 kept in original condition and cared for will increase in value over time. There never will be another made, and the last ones were made nearly 80 years ago.
 
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