I have an opportunity to buy an FN Mauser rebarrled in .338 Win Mag. But I am hesitant to make the purchase because it is a surplus military action which means it has the thumb cut on the left side of the action which weakens it, and since I have heard stories of this, on occasion, leading to problems, I fear that a hard kicking round like the .338 my be a bad choice to use with this action. What do you guys think, am I just being to paranoid?
Many rifles were sporterized from old military actions for cartridges that I do not think appropriate for the action or the materials. That action was designed and built for the bolt thrust of an 8mm Mauser. As such, a new receiver is perfectly adequate to hold the cartridge thrust of a cartridge in the range of the 8 mm Mauser. However, a 338 Win Mag is a much larger diameter cartridge and owners want magnum level performance, which means, high pressures.
Based on a look of the materials used in these things I don’t think these Win Mag or Weatherby Magnum conversions are appropriate.
I know some are going to point that the following data is on WW1 rifles, but based on an examination of Hatcher’s Notebook, I think the Germans used the same steels all the way through WW2, and so would, I expect, FN.
Rifle & Carbine 98: M98 Firearms of the German Army from 1898 to 1918 Dieter Storz
Inside Dieter’s book are the material specifications for the M98 Mauser.
The material looks to be a manganese steel alloy, with copper added for easy machining.
I assume the material is in the normalized state, but the property requirements were
Ultimate 78.2 Ksi, Yield 36.9 KSI, elongation 15%.
Carbon LT 0.40%
Manganese LT 0.90%
Copper LT 0.18%
Silicon LT 0.30%
Phosphorous LT 0.04%
Sulphur LT 0.06%
Closest I can find is 1038 Carbon steel,
Carbon 0.35-0.42%
Manganese 0.60-0.90
Typical uses include machine, plow, and carriage bolts, tie wire, cylinder head studs, and machined parts, U-bolts, concrete reinforcing rods, forgings, and non-critical springs
Could not find data for heat treated 1038 steel, which makes me think this steel is no longer used in severe applications that require heat treatment.
For AISI 1030 Carbon Steel
Carbon 0.270-0.340
MN 0.60-0.90
1 in round bar, water quenched from 1600 F, 1100 F temper
Ultimate, 84,800 psi
Yield 63,100 psi
Many of today’s receivers are made of 4140. I picked a mid range heat treatment for comparison. For a 1 in round AISI 4140 Steel, Heat treatment normalized 870°C (1600°F), reheated 845°C (1550°F), oil quenched, tempered 595° (1100 F)
Hardness, Rockwell C 34 Converted from Brinell hardness.
Tensile Strength, Ultimate 148000 psi
Tensile Strength, Yield 132000 psi
Elongation at Break 19.0 %
If that receiver was made from modern alloy steels I would say, hey it probably has the margin of strength to reliably hold the bolt thrust of a 338 Win Magnum. But, this receiver is not made of modern materials, has been through one service lifetime, and I am of the opinion that these belted magnum conversions are not appropriate for these military actions. Whatever load it is carrying exceeds original design limits and given the age, material technology, I would say, it is a risk. While I am certain the rifle has fired a number of rounds, who knows how many more rounds it will take to crack the lugs.
Unless you could buy the rifle for a pittance, I would look for a 338 Win Mag in a more modern action.