Broken Mauser Safety

Amsdorf

Moderator
Received beautiful K98, made in 1941, matching numbers on receiver, bolt, stock, etc. Nazi proof marks intact.

But....the safety "tang" snapped off in shipping. The guy who shipped it to me shipped it with the bolt in the rifle.

Have filed a claim with FedEx. How much has this diminished the value of the rifle?

And, how hard is it to replace the safety? Any suggestions?

Here's a pic.

Broken-Bolt-e1350740224278.jpg
 
Easy to replace, and cheap.
I only own one Mauser, a 24/47, and the safety lever never operated properly. A little home machining in an attempt to get it work only screwed it up worse.

They can be a real pain...

Far as value, I don't see how it would matter...they're pretty universal far as I know, and not serialized- so you'd never know if the broken one were "original" to the weapon, or not.
 
Are you aware of any instructions online? Have been looking through YouTube and so far only videos of bolt take down.
 
After the bolt's "taken down" & the FP/etc disassembled, IIRC the safety shaft simply slides out toward the rear of the housing.

The tip of the FP needs to be pressed against a piece of wood (military mausers have a brass roundel with a hole in the middle for this use), and the housing pressed forward to compress the mainspring, thus exposing the cocking piece's full length.

The cocking piece then can then be rotated 90-degrees with the fingers to disengage it with the FP's rear lugs, and removed.

The pressure in the MS & housing can then be eased, the old safety shaft removed, the new safety installed, then the housing reinstalled to re-compress the mainspring again while the cocking piece is also re-installed on the tail of the FP.

Have fun.


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I have several German M98 military safeties in my parts box, I can send you one if you like. Like PetahW said, replacement is easy.
 
I find it hard to envision the force needed to break that safety off, plus it doesn't look right. Could it be a cast replacement?

Jim
 
Your Right, the amount of force required to do that could potentialy break or stress crack the Cocking Piece and Firing pin. I wonder If that Rifle may have been damaged in Battle and stored like that for years.
 
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