Rumour has it the ex mil actions in Parker hale were BRNO - has yours got any markings?Just looks the same as my Parker-Hales.
What markings should I be looking for?Rumour has it the ex mil actions in Parker hale were BRNO - has yours got any markings?
They were not brno, I’ve had a few PH’s and a few BRNO made actions, the BRNO made actions were of far higher machining tolerances than anything I’ve ever seen in PH’s. I’d argue most PH’s were made using cheaper interwar mil surplus actionsRumour has it the ex mil actions in Parker hale were BRNO - has yours got any markings?
FN of course made lots of military actions with thumb slots, as well as commercial straight walled actions.Thought the serial number made it a FN and the cut out is ex military @VSS do your PHs have the cut out on the left hand side?
F Block (serial number F) is likely an ex mil action from Oberndorf. Most likely a ‘Mod. 98’ , not to be confused with M98. Which is an excellent action for custom rifle builds. The bolt handle is not FN.Any help well received -
Possibly a basis for a classic build.
Thank you!
Yes, both have the cut out on the left.Thought the serial number made it a FN and the cut out is ex military @VSS do your PHs have the cut out on the left hand side?
PH will likely have scrubbed allYes, both have the cut out on the left.
They are identical rifles in all but calibre.
I'll have a look for markings tomorrow.
I never thought of thatPH will likely have scrubbed all
Markings an replaced with their own serial numbers Tim
Nah, only shorter versions were the Kurtz. And this is not one.Possibly either my old eyes or the angle of the photograph but the action looks rather short compared to that of a standard M98?
K
Hence the PH M81 is seen as a working man’s rigbyI never thought of that
Does make me chuckle a bit though, when I see expensive rifles which are essentially exactly the same as mine!
I expect I would keep the existing rings unless they are a hideous thing for the action. Really great feedback though thank you John.F Block (serial number F) is likely an ex mil action from Oberndorf. Most likely a ‘Mod. 98’ , not to be confused with M98. Which is an excellent action for custom rifle builds. The bolt handle is not FN.
This looks like a good action, but. Unawareness drilled for that particular 3 screw scope base, so if you want to use two part bases you need to drill two new holes in the rear bridge, making it very busy with holes! Meaning, laser weld the existing one and refinish, not cheap. But! There’s nothing wrong with the pictured scope base for Leupold or redfield style rings
How do you figure on F block being Oberndorf - didn’t all 98 manufacturers use the same prefix letter blocks on their rifles. My take on serial numbers is that they’re mostly a red herring and it minefield. Posting up under action shots on a collectors forum along with proof stamps can help. Eg the first proof may show country of origin?F Block (serial number F) is likely an ex mil action from Oberndorf. Most likely a ‘Mod. 98’ , not to be confused with M98. Which is an excellent action for custom rifle builds. The bolt handle is not FN.
This looks like a good action, but. Unawareness drilled for that particular 3 screw scope base, so if you want to use two part bases you need to drill two new holes in the rear bridge, making it very busy with holes! Meaning, laser weld the existing one and refinish, not cheap. But! There’s nothing wrong with the pictured scope base for Leupold or redfield style rings
8x57 is fine and a great round if kept under 150yds or so. Hugely underrated IMHOI have only shot a proper Mauser rifle once and that was in Germany it was a 8x57 old ww2 rifle modernised into a hunting rifle, I know it was ww2 and it still had the swastika engraving on the action.
Not a pleasant calibre.