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Yugo mauser crest mod 98
Yugo mauser crest mod 98





  1. Yugo mauser crest mod 98 manual#
  2. Yugo mauser crest mod 98 plus#

I have two Zastava LK M70 rifles with that same importer's stamp having two trigger set trigger system I purchased from two different sellers (neither associated with Cabela's) on in 2019. Numerous such bolt action rifles bearing that importer's stamp Foxtrot) hit the US market over the last year or so. Pay attention to the callouts for "M98" and you'll see the parts specific to the rifle you just purchased.

Yugo mauser crest mod 98 manual#

I don't exactly recall where I downloaded this copy of the owner's manual so I made the copy in my Google drive available to be viewed. So it should work fine for 7X57mm but if you plan on mounting a scope you need to be cognizant of the distances between the holes. Safety is the flag style safety mounted on the bolt instead of the sliding thumb safety used on the Zastava M70 action used for cartridges with lengths up to ?X64mm (7X64mm Brenneke. The stamped instead of milled fixed magazine floorplate *I think* designates a M48A style action. 257 Roberts, and so on) or shorter (including ?X51mm such as. It will accommodate cartridges of ?X57mm (8X57mm. This is an intermediate length action specifically for the 8X57mm JS cartridge. It's a Zastava M98, which is a civilian rifle built using the M48 action. and if you ever decide you dont want it, I'd gladly pay you what you have in it and take it off your hands (and leave it as an 8x57 ). and a barrel swap to 7x57 is just as easy and affordable as it would be on a K98.Īt the price you paid, you got a good deal regardles. Im just saying I havent seen it before.Īll that said. or that a milled floorplate wasnt made with the tick marks. Thats not to say the floorplate hasnt been swapped out at some point. The little tick marks around the floorplate on the rifle you bought are what all of the stamped floorplates look like that I have seen. the million or so rifles made after that all had stamped. only about 140K of the 48's were made in 1950 and 51 that had milled floorplates. If you have a milled floor plate you very likely have a 98. after 1956 more stamped parts were incorporated into the 48's. but like the others its hard to say definitively without getting some better close ups of the action.Ī big indicator is all 48's made after 1952 used sheet metal stamped floor plates. Im leaning toward option 2 based on what I see. If it shoots straight you did just fine at $299, whether its option 1 or 2. photos don't show the refurb location marking on the receiver ring. I'm leaning a bit towards #2 since it has Zastava production markings visible in your photo and the GunsInt. If you suspect this to be one of those, be careful as Mauser 98/Kar98k parts will not interchange.Īs I said, it's hard to tell without a good view of the other side of the receiver but if it's a military surplus action as the listing says, then it's probably either #1 or #2. It's a Zastava M48, a post-1950 Zastava-produced M98 pattern rifle, which is a combination of the Kar98k and the M24 design points but has an incompatible bolt with the German Kar98k.

Yugo mauser crest mod 98 plus#

98/48" on the side, plus an indicator of where the refurbishment was done on the receiver ring (i.e., PREDUZECE 44 in the case of my own refurbed Kar98k).Ģ. 98" on the side of the receiver and rifles refurbished after 1950 will have "Mod. Rifles refurbished prior to 1950 will have "Mod. It's a Zastava M 98/48, which were WWII-era Kar98k rifles made across Europe and refurbished by Marshal Tito's regime after WWII.







Yugo mauser crest mod 98