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Sporterized K98 worth $20K, why?

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23 September 2007, 21:12
Fjold
Sporterized K98 worth $20K, why?
I know next to nothing about Mausers, (I'm left handed so I never got into them). Why is this K98 worth over $20K?

http://www.gunbroker.com/Auction/ViewItem.asp?Item=80436632


Frank



"I don't know what there is about buffalo that frightens me so.....He looks like he hates you personally. He looks like you owe him money."
- Robert Ruark, Horn of the Hunter, 1953

NRA Life, SAF Life, CRPA Life, DRSS lite

23 September 2007, 21:35
Michael Petrov
You might read the "Information added" at the bottom of the add.
23 September 2007, 21:57
GSP7
http://www.gunbroker.com/Auction/ViewBidHistory.asp?Item=80436632


Eeker
23 September 2007, 22:27
KSTEPHENS
amazing.
and he thought he had a $300 rifle.
hope his wife doesnt check his auctions.
i dont care if Hitler poached a polar bear with it. its not worth 20K.
24 September 2007, 06:24
Fjold
quote:
Originally posted by Michael Petrov:
You might read the "Information added" at the bottom of the add.


OK, I read it and posted it here; Why is this worth $20K?

Very late model k98 rifle. Bolt and receiver barrel matches. Clear nice bore. 8mm caliber. Metal parts untouched in original condition. Stock is sporterized. Great example of a late model stamp and late style bolt. FFL or C&R needed to trasfer gun $30 for shipping
[Information added 09/15/2007 10:53:07 AM]
Rifle has no import mark and top of receiver has a stamp swjXE stamp. It is not russian capture rifle. Buttplate has no numbers.Floorplate is a mismach.

[Information added 09/15/2007 11:36:38 PM]
Additional infromation: The trigger guard is stamped svw and floorplate has the stamp byf. No numbers. Magazine follower is stamp lxr. All late style stamped trigger guard and single screw set. I will post pictures tomorrow.

[Information added 09/18/2007 8:34:49 PM]
A letter from a helpful collector: I'm sure you puzzled by now as to why your swjXE marked rifle is getting out of hand- the final Steyr code (unknown at the time BBOTW was written) was swj XE,- they are very rare.


Frank



"I don't know what there is about buffalo that frightens me so.....He looks like he hates you personally. He looks like you owe him money."
- Robert Ruark, Horn of the Hunter, 1953

NRA Life, SAF Life, CRPA Life, DRSS lite

24 September 2007, 08:05
GSP7
It isnt! He paid $19700 to much, OOPPS! Big Grin
24 September 2007, 08:38
TMG
Niche item. BBOTW = Backbone of the Wehrmacht (sp?), a book about the history of the 98K (for the non-German collector types - collector types have it down to the abreviation of course).

I cannot afford to collect these things and frankly don't have the interest, but from watching the auctions it appears to me that the later and more primitive ones fetch outrageous prices i.e. the VG-1 models with unfinished stocks, blind magazines / single shot actions, missing parts, crude rear sight blades dovetailed into receiver, etc. This one may not have been butchered by anyone other than the person who made it +/- 62 years ago.

Anybody out there with a funky, good for nothing 98K with a plastic / Bakelite stock on it, or even the stock itself, I've got two crisp $100 bills for you to send it my way...

Trust me I'm doing you a favor.

Todd
24 September 2007, 08:42
vapodog
quote:
Originally posted by GSP7:
It isnt! He paid $19700 to much, OOPPS! Big Grin

Every Mauser I look at is for the action.....nothing more.....I'm not saying someone paid too much but the most I'd offer for it would be $50 and then I'd be happy if it was refused!


///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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Winston Churchill
24 September 2007, 08:44
ireload2
That ordinance code is so rare it is not even on these lists. I have looked at a lot of K98s and have never seen or heard of it.

German Ordinance codes

Another list of codes
24 September 2007, 08:49
HerrMesser
According to mauser experts on Gunboards that rifle was one of the last few hundred made at the Styre factory in 1945 and that makes it very very rare and the seller did not know what he had.

Rad


NRA Benefactor Member
24 September 2007, 09:06
ireload2
quote:
Originally posted by vapodog:
quote:
Originally posted by GSP7:
It isnt! He paid $19700 to much, OOPPS! Big Grin

Every Mauser I look at is for the action.....nothing more.....I'm not saying someone paid too much but the most I'd offer for it would be $50 and then I'd be happy if it was refused!


It pays to know the codes because if you stumble across one of those you can potentially buy a lot of actions on the deal.
24 September 2007, 09:22
GSP7
Ive seen That seller in eagle idaho selling for several years he had a bunch of nice swedish rifles at one time. Lot of other mausers too. wonder where he gets them all , maybe an importer.
24 September 2007, 16:41
jeffeosso
wow... that's all i can say... wow ...
look at the bid history... i was concerned is was faked, but wow,


opinions vary band of bubbas and STC hunting Club

Information on Ammoguide about
the416AR, 458AR, 470AR, 500AR
What is an AR round? Case Drawings 416-458-470AR and 500AR.
476AR,
http://www.weaponsmith.com
25 September 2007, 01:13
cummins cowboy
someone is out of their mind, I knew this guy who bought a gun that belonged to poncho via and that only fetched 25k, I can't see a gun like this going for this kind of money with so little history behind it, when you get into this price range the gun should have a notorious owner or somethng other than the fact that its a rare poorly put together late model mauser that the nazis put together


in times when one needs a rifle, he tends to need it very badly.....PHC
25 September 2007, 01:57
tin can
the situation strikes as the buyer has more money than he knows what to do with, or he has a buyer for it.
25 September 2007, 04:06
22WRF
quote:
Originally posted by tin can:
the situation strikes as the buyer has more money than he knows what to do with, or he has a buyer for it.


Or he purchased it as an investment. Remember, when Vincent Van Gogh was later in his life he was sending most of his work to his brother who was in Paris and was an art dealer. The brother had trouble giving those paintings away. Today they are worth millions. I remember back in 1970 I was living in Santa Barbara CA and I had a chance to buy a couple of photographs by Edward Weston. They were in the $3000 range and I thought somebody was crazy in the head. Those same prints today sell for anywhere from $50,000 to $75,000.

People with money know what they are doing when they make purchases like this. That is why they have lots of money!!!!!!
25 September 2007, 04:57
tin can
quote:
Or he purchased it as an investment.


I recall as a teenager buying a '95 Chilean through the mail from Century- it's been gone a long time now. (ouch)
25 September 2007, 09:26
Alberta Canuck
This is an investment just like the dot.coms, or the adjustable-rate-mortgaged $750,000 houses, to me. That is, not an investment at all, but a speculative hope.

Sure some make money off this kind of thing, if they sell quickly enough, but most lose. Bubbles based on ridiculous assumptions sooner or later all burst. Just like the government assumptions that they can spend us out of poverty....

Oh the human condition...at least sometimes it's fun to watch from a safe distance.......


My country gal's just a moonshiner's daughter, but I love her still.

25 September 2007, 09:58
22WRF
This is different than all of the dot coms and the $750,000 houses. there were and are lots and lots of those investmets. there are very very few mausers with that particular marking.
25 September 2007, 10:10
Alberta Canuck
quote:
Originally posted by 22WRF:
This is different than all of the dot coms and the $750,000 houses. there were and are lots and lots of those investmets. there are very very few mausers with that particular marking.




There is a long-standing saying in the collecting field (collections of anything):

"Rare junk is still junk."

It just takes some folks longer to learn that than others. (Not pointing the finger at you WRF).


My country gal's just a moonshiner's daughter, but I love her still.

25 September 2007, 10:16
vapodog
quote:
There is a long-standing saying in the collecting field (collections of anything):

"Rare junk is still junk."


I once found a Studebaker pickup truck for sale.....cheap and in fair condition.....I was delighted and wanted a restored antique....until I discovered this very statement.....it takes more than rare.....it must also be highly wanted.

This sale sure rings as a scam to me.


///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
"Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery."
Winston Churchill
25 September 2007, 11:01
GSP7
Look at the bids. all the bids over about $800 all happened in about 1 day.

Bid war between 2 people

All for one swjXE stamp.
26 September 2007, 22:28
ireload2
4 different bidders bid $2000 or more for it.
You guys vastly underestimate the market for Nazi related relics.