Sporterized 8mm Mauser 98.
Nicely done.
Replacement stock, GI sights removed, drilled and tapped for peep sight, Peep sight, polished and blued. Nice job, classic sporter.
Can you close the bolt without having to push down the mag follower? That is another modification to the GI gun that was usually done when sporterizing.
Also, cannot tell if the trigger is original, or not. Replacing the trigger was very common too. Also can't tell from the pics if the trigger guard is original, or not.
..I only assume for many it was because they didn't want a constant reminder of what they went through to get the rifle. Sort of like a catharsis, taking off the uniform and getting back to real life. Maybe I'm reading too much into things,..
While you are probably right for some people, I think the majority of the sporterizing was done for more pragmatic reasons, and not done by the guys who "earned" the rifle in combat. I've known a lot of WWII vets, and without exception, a war trophy that they "earned" by killing the enemy who was trying to kill them was never altered. Rifle, pistol, swords, etc.
Maybe there were some guys that had to do something so it wouldn't remind them of the war, but I never met any. I have met people like that, and they (generally) wouldn't keep the rifle at all...did bring a rifle (or whatever) back, but then found it better not to keep it.
On the other hand, lots of vets brought back guns acquired during the war. Accquired, not "earned". There is a difference in the emotional attachment. Won in a poker game, picked up after the fighting, lifted from captured stocks, etc. These guns were often sporterized.
And then there the rest of us, numerically a majority, I would think. Guys who were not WWII vets, but got one (or more) of the millions of surplus military rifles on the market in the decades since 1945.
We sporterized them to make them BETTER hunting rifles. Even through the 70s, you could take a cheap milsurp and turn it into a sweet hunting rifle for less than the cost of a new factory sporter.
You have a sweet classic sporter, and in the 60s would have brought top dollar in its class. Today, the market doesn't want that. And they won't pay squat for one.