When he got the gun it was worthless and whoever did that job before this gentleman got it was bad he actually restored the rifle to make it look beautiful and glow again!!!🎉
I've been watching this young man's firearm restoration videos, and he is getting better and better. I would be proud for him to do a restoration for one of my treasures.
My grandfather was a gunsmith who took many cheap, military surplus Mauser rifles and converted them to sporters. I remember him telling me - "The Mauser 98 action is the best there is". I have both restored military rifles and built custom long-range rifles from a surplus M98 action. Re-chambering a Mauser is very simple with the extractor cut relief in the action and not cut into the barrel. The historic Model 98 action was the basis for the Springfield M1903, the Winchester M70, and the Remington 700. The Mauser brothers Paul and Wilhelm probably did not know at the time that they designed an action that would last more than a century.
You really brought life back to that old Mauser. One thing that caught my eye. On disassembly the upper hand gaurd showed a previous repair attempt to glue the spring steel clip back to the wood. That steel clip remained stuck to the barrel just forward of the receiver.
Thank you for showing the bore as part of the process! Yeah most of the Czech Mauser rifles are in 7.92 x 57 mm more often called 8 mm Mauser, while a LOT of the various South American contract Mauser rifles were in 7 x 57 mm like yours! It's a great round and you've done a fantastic job bring that one back to shooting condiion.
@@TheKinzlerBrosspecial thanks for you, remember "always be careful with weapons, take care of safety during test firing (it's good that you do test firing like this), remember I subscribed to you because of your thoroughness in the restoration and test firing of the weapon you repaired at the end of the video because that's why the purpose of restoration is for the weapon to return in good condition, function well and can be used and preserve its historical value, unlike some restorers, get a good and good weapon for restoration but its function is damaged and turned into a toy. lose value and destroy the historical value of reason for neutralization. The weapon is just trash that has no value and is useless for restoration.
Beautiful job , always enjoyable watching professionals plying their trade , I wince at some attempts I see on other TH-cam channels , must be very rewarding seeing the before and after firearm .
Aku baru beberapa hari menemukan channel ini dan aku sangat tertarik. Ternyata senjata itu tidak akan pernah usang kalo ditangan orang yang tepat.. Bagus.. 👍👍
@@TheKinzlerBros sama-sama bro dan siapa tahu suatu saat nanti kamu bukan cuma merestorasi senjata klasik tapi menjadi perancang senjata yang canggih.. Semangat... !!! 👍💪💪
My one of my first restorations was a 1916 Erfurt Kar 98 mine was in as miserable shape. With a lot of elbow grease ( I had no access to a bead box), and nearly a gallon of BLO I was totally surprised at how good it came out. As always excellent work.
Nice work! That stock would have been a good candidate for scraping with some flat metal instead of sanding since it was loading up that sandpaper so fast. Saves some time and material that way. I was aware of the Czech G33/40 mountain carbine (our Grandfather brought one home after WWII and we still have it) but I wasn't aware of this rifle at all. Cool video!
Nice restoration.. Here in Brazil we still use a variant like this in the very basic training, its a Mq M968, almost like this one, but the aim is the drum-like one (like the MP5) and they are chambered in 4 7.62x51 NATO rounds
Great job you really brought it back to its former glory, but if it was up to me i would not have removed the old blueing i would just have boild the metal pieces to restore the old blueing, Mark Novak has som good videos on how to do that. But else then that you did a fantastic job with the new blueing it looks just like the original but stil best to keep the original.
When you loaded that single round you really stress the claw extractor by not feeding from the mag. That stiffness when the bolt snapped close was the extractor snapping over the rim of the cartridge. I’ve fixed a many of Mausers with broken extractors because unaware owners push a single loaded round into the chamber like that.
I don't understand your comment. The Mauser's bolt was made specifically with such a long extractor in mind solely for the fact that it's more durable and bends slightly sideways in case the extractor needs to go over the rim of a stuck cartridge and not damage both the rim & the extractor. It was part of the design. It would be harmful if the extractor was directly fixed / milled into the bolt like, say, a Mousqueton Berthier.
Well I’m sorry you don’t understand. It can be hard to be perfectly clear typing on the phone sometimes. The Mauser bolt is not like most extractors where there is a central pivot point with a spring in the rear so it can snap over the rim without breaking the cartridge rim resulting in an extraction failure. The Mauser bolt IS fix. It is meant to slip around the rim of the cartridge as it rises out of the magazine. This allows it to hold the round against the bolt when the bolt travels forwards and backwards.
@James T Kirk makes sense. So when you load a single round from the top into the chamber, then push the bolt forward, the extractor don't want that round there it didn't help put there in the first place!
The germans liked the idea of these small mausers. I got a small ring mauser G33/40 marked ‘’dot’’ , made in 1942 by Brno for the germans, they called it gebirgsjägerkarabine i believe.
The factory was in Czechoslovakia in Brno! Brno is Second biggest city in Czech Republic! No Germany! Germany start occupaied rest Czechoslovakia in 15 March 1939.
Excelente restauracion! Este canal es uno de los mejores en la restauración de armas de fuego. Tengo experiencia en manejo y disparo de algunas carabinas y fusiles, pero nunca dispare un fusil Mouser de 1937. Voy a seguir mirando los vídeos del canal. Gracias.
i had to redo a 1935 peruvian mauser i bought from a friend at work. i had to redo the stock. i had an old missouri conservation magazine and they recommended vaseline to seal the stock against the weather. i did what they recommended and i am glad i did.
I'm at 0:37 and this is gonna be interesting. Never done a restoration. But I own a vast variety of firearms. Can't wait to see what you do to this beauty of a firearm..
Dude I ran across that page as well. I bought one and I was trying to look up videos and came across yours. Awesome stuff man. Hopefully I can do right by this. You breathed new life back into the gun. I have restored something like 18 firearms over the course of 6 years. And they have never turned out as well as this.
I love how most of the old guns just come apart like that with the trigger group like the M1 Garands... The old timers really knew how to make a great gun with simple mechanics. Also, I have to be "that guy" with this... "This one will be cold blued" *Pulls out a blow torch*
@@TheKinzlerBros qq - after dipping the hot metal part in the blueing solution, how long does it stay there? You then transfer it into the water container - is it just a quick wash or it stays there for some time? Thanks
Не знаю как вы, но я бы применил технологию напыления металла на те ужасные каверны. Такие компактные и ручные установки уже давно есть. И они напыляют очень точечно. Сердце кровью обливается, когда вижу такие каверны от ржавчины.
Beautiful restoration man, keeping it original is so perfect unlike some guy I watched "restoring" a kar98 and through away the food furniture. You man are awesome
May I suggest that you try using a scraper on the wood first before using sandpaper.. And if you do use sandpaper, you should wrap if around a hard sponge or a similar type of backer. Using sandpaper with just your finger pressure will result in uneven levels of sanding. Otherwise great job!
Love the restoration the only thing I could say is that if you use a rolled spring steel scraper like the guys over at anvil the wood finish comes off without taking of any of the wood
You should check out mark Novak and how he uses a scraper to clean up gunked up stocks. One reason he does it is so his sandpaper doesn’t get immediate clogged and lose its cutting ability like yours seemed to
Really nice restoration of this Mauser. Most of the time the contract mausers instead of being 7.92 or 8mm. Yours is 7 x 57. I have a Chilean mauser that was a contract mauser and it is 7x 57. Still a very nice operating rifle. Great job
Nice restoration but you forgot to remove the spring ring of the handguard around the barrel before blasting. Normally the ring has two little screws and is placed where the foam was. Like a spanish La Coruna Mauser.
When he got the gun it was worthless and whoever did that job before this gentleman got it was bad he actually restored the rifle to make it look beautiful and glow again!!!🎉
Thank you very much for the kind words and thanks for watching!
I've been watching this young man's firearm restoration videos, and he is getting better and better. I would be proud for him to do a restoration for one of my treasures.
Thank you very much for the kind words and for watching we appreciate it!
My grandfather was a gunsmith who took many cheap, military surplus Mauser rifles and converted them to sporters. I remember him telling me - "The Mauser 98 action is the best there is". I have both restored military rifles and built custom long-range rifles from a surplus M98 action. Re-chambering a Mauser is very simple with the extractor cut relief in the action and not cut into the barrel. The historic Model 98 action was the basis for the Springfield M1903, the Winchester M70, and the Remington 700. The Mauser brothers Paul and Wilhelm probably did not know at the time that they designed an action that would last more than a century.
Very cool, thanks for all the info I enjoyed it. Thanks for watching
These Czech Mausers from the mid-30s are sweet. Excellent metalurgy, great barrels, slick actions and nice 2 stage triggers.
You know your stuff, thanks for watching!
the tolerances were very good on them too.
You really brought life back to that old Mauser. One thing that caught my eye. On disassembly the upper hand gaurd showed a previous repair attempt to glue the spring steel clip back to the wood. That steel clip remained stuck to the barrel just forward of the receiver.
You have a very keen eye, thanks for watching!
Thank you for showing the bore as part of the process! Yeah most of the Czech Mauser rifles are in 7.92 x 57 mm more often called 8 mm Mauser, while a LOT of the various South American contract Mauser rifles were in 7 x 57 mm like yours! It's a great round and you've done a fantastic job bring that one back to shooting condiion.
Thanks for the info we appreciate it and Thanks for watching
Pa i
@@TheKinzlerBrosspecial thanks for you, remember "always be careful with weapons, take care of safety during test firing (it's good that you do test firing like this), remember I subscribed to you because of your thoroughness in the restoration and test firing of the weapon you repaired at the end of the video because that's why the purpose of restoration is for the weapon to return in good condition, function well and can be used and preserve its historical value, unlike some restorers, get a good and good weapon for restoration but its function is damaged and turned into a toy. lose value and destroy the historical value of reason for neutralization. The weapon is just trash that has no value and is useless for restoration.
Love your video. No music.just the sound of the tools. 👍👍
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks for watching
As usual another great video, very therapeutic watching you restoring old guns !!!
Thank you very much we appreciate it!
Beautiful job , always enjoyable watching professionals plying their trade , I wince at some attempts I see on other TH-cam channels , must be very rewarding seeing the before and after firearm .
Thank you very much, absolutely very satisfying. Thanks for watching!
Výborná práce při restaurování naší zbraně z Brněnské zbrojovky 🎉❤
Thank you we appreciate it, thanks for watching!
Přesně, fakt perfektní práce. Pozdravuju z Brna :)
A já pozdravuju z Vlašimi - Sellier a Bellot je zdejší fabrika@@jirikovac9184
Super práce zachován puvodní stav
Snapping the bolt back together is the most satisfying sound.
Ya for sure! Thanks for watching
Well done! The patina came out nicely.
Thank you we appreciate it! Thanks for watching
thats more like it lads a job well done, youve come a long way since the Musket
Thank you we appreciate it, thanks for watching!
Aku baru beberapa hari menemukan channel ini dan aku sangat tertarik.
Ternyata senjata itu tidak akan pernah usang kalo ditangan orang yang tepat..
Bagus.. 👍👍
Glad you found us, we appreciate the support and kind words! Thanks for watching
@@TheKinzlerBros sama-sama bro dan siapa tahu suatu saat nanti kamu bukan cuma merestorasi senjata klasik tapi menjadi perancang senjata yang canggih..
Semangat... !!! 👍💪💪
Brosnan, that turned out awesome! Great job!
Thank you, thanks for watching!
My one of my first restorations was a 1916 Erfurt Kar 98 mine was in as miserable shape. With a lot of elbow grease ( I had no access to a bead box), and nearly a gallon of BLO I was totally surprised at how good it came out. As always excellent work.
That's cool, ya the bead blasting helps a lot. Thanks for watching we appreciate it!
Beautiful restoration of the rifle
Thank you very much
Amazing restoration!
Thank you very much!
Balistol! Great stuff!
Ya, the smell isn't great though! Thanks for watching
6:30 save the sandpaper! Start with glass and scrape. Nice job, Love Brno's.
Right, thanks we appreciate it! Thanks for watching!
This guy really knows how to take apart a rifle
Takes a lot of practice, thanks for watching!
Nice work! That stock would have been a good candidate for scraping with some flat metal instead of sanding since it was loading up that sandpaper so fast. Saves some time and material that way.
I was aware of the Czech G33/40 mountain carbine (our Grandfather brought one home after WWII and we still have it) but I wasn't aware of this rifle at all.
Cool video!
Thank you very much and thanks for the tip we appreciate it, That is very cool that you have one as well, thanks for watching!
@@TheKinzlerBros No prob, you do a great job
Nice restoration.. Here in Brazil we still use a variant like this in the very basic training, its a Mq M968, almost like this one, but the aim is the drum-like one (like the MP5) and they are chambered in 4 7.62x51 NATO rounds
Thank you very much, Yeah they are a reliable firearm, This one is chambered in 7 x 57, thanks for watching!
I remember seeing those rifles on that auction site, might have to get me one now.
Ya hopefully there is still one left, thanks for watching!
Great job you really brought it back to its former glory, but if it was up to me i would not have removed the old blueing i would just have boild the metal pieces to restore the old blueing, Mark Novak has som good videos on how to do that.
But else then that you did a fantastic job with the new blueing it looks just like the original but stil best to keep the original.
I hear you and I know where you're coming from, thank you very much and thanks for watching
I really loved this firearm.
Absolutely awesome!
Very good to watch.
Thank you, thanks for watching!
Nice save! Well done.
Thank you very much!
its so satisfying looking you using clip to load it, so smooth! thanks for making this video!
Thank you very much, glad you like it! Thanks for watching
When you loaded that single round you really stress the claw extractor by not feeding from the mag. That stiffness when the bolt snapped close was the extractor snapping over the rim of the cartridge. I’ve fixed a many of Mausers with broken extractors because unaware owners push a single loaded round into the chamber like that.
Thank you very much for the tip we appreciate it, thanks for watching
I don't understand your comment. The Mauser's bolt was made specifically with such a long extractor in mind solely for the fact that it's more durable and bends slightly sideways in case the extractor needs to go over the rim of a stuck cartridge and not damage both the rim & the extractor. It was part of the design. It would be harmful if the extractor was directly fixed / milled into the bolt like, say, a Mousqueton Berthier.
Well I’m sorry you don’t understand. It can be hard to be perfectly clear typing on the phone sometimes.
The Mauser bolt is not like most extractors where there is a central pivot point with a spring in the rear so it can snap over the rim without breaking the cartridge rim resulting in an extraction failure.
The Mauser bolt IS fix. It is meant to slip around the rim of the cartridge as it rises out of the magazine. This allows it to hold the round against the bolt when the bolt travels forwards and backwards.
@James T Kirk makes sense. So when you load a single round from the top into the chamber, then push the bolt forward, the extractor don't want that round there it didn't help put there in the first place!
I got an M48 mauser that doesn't always extract. Could that be why? The casing always leaves the extractor claw but doesn't always fly out.
The germans liked the idea of these small mausers. I got a small ring mauser G33/40 marked ‘’dot’’ , made in 1942 by Brno for the germans, they called it gebirgsjägerkarabine i believe.
Very cool thanks for watching
The factory was in Czechoslovakia in Brno! Brno is Second biggest city in Czech Republic! No Germany! Germany start occupaied rest Czechoslovakia in 15 March 1939.
Super job to a rare weapon😎👌🏼
Thank you very much
Lots of work! Looks good!!
Yes, thank you very much!
Whatever collector value this rifle had is gone forever. I can't believe you sand blasted it!
I preserved it so it can be used for another 100 and some years thanks for watching!
Cool little rifle!!🍻👍👍
I love it
Это ПРЕКРАСНО!!!!
Thank you, thanks for watching!
Absolutely great work !! ❤❤
Thanks a lot!
For what you started with, Great job. Your smithing boggles my mind
Yeah it was in rough shape, thank you very much I appreciate it and thanks for watching
Nice resto!
Thank you!, thanks for watching
Love what your doing
Thank you, we appreciate it! Thanks for watching
Congratulations Master.. With respect and love from Türkiye..
Welcome Turkey and thank you very much we appreciate it, thanks for watching
Very nice restoration. Thanks for the awesome video
Thanks for watching!
You brought her back to life. Nice job!
Thank you very much
It came out better than I thought it would .
Thank you very much I appreciate it
You are a amazing craftsman, bravo..
Thank you very much!
Excelente restauracion! Este canal es uno de los mejores en la restauración de armas de fuego. Tengo experiencia en manejo y disparo de algunas carabinas y fusiles, pero nunca dispare un fusil Mouser de 1937. Voy a seguir mirando los vídeos del canal. Gracias.
Thank you very much for the kind words, that's awesome! We appreciate the support!
i had to redo a 1935 peruvian mauser i bought from a friend at work. i had to redo the stock. i had an old missouri conservation magazine and they recommended vaseline to seal the stock against the weather. i did what they recommended and i am glad i did.
That's awesome, great gun. Thanks for watching and for the tip
You boys are getting very good at this excellent job you saved another one from the scrap yards keep up the amazing work six stars my friends
Thank you very much Joseph we appreciate your support and thanks for watching!
Beautiful job....awsome
Thank you very much
It is amazing how quiet the detonation is!
The volume is turned down a little, thanks for watching!
I'm at 0:37 and this is gonna be interesting. Never done a restoration. But I own a vast variety of firearms. Can't wait to see what you do to this beauty of a firearm..
Hope you enjoy it, thanks for watching!
😂
Gut gemacht nicht überrestauriert.
Der Charakter der Waffe ist erhalten geblieben
Thank you very much we appreciate it, thanks for watching!
Dude I ran across that page as well. I bought one and I was trying to look up videos and came across yours. Awesome stuff man. Hopefully I can do right by this. You breathed new life back into the gun. I have restored something like 18 firearms over the course of 6 years. And they have never turned out as well as this.
Crazy!, Thank you very much I appreciate the kind words and I wish you luck on yours hopefully it turns out great, thanks for watching!
Beautiful looking job 👍👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks 👍
Great jop you best Congratulations
Thank you very much we appreciate it
I love how most of the old guns just come apart like that with the trigger group like the M1 Garands... The old timers really knew how to make a great gun with simple mechanics. Also, I have to be "that guy" with this... "This one will be cold blued" *Pulls out a blow torch*
That's how you cold blue, now we hot blue. Thanks for watching!
Great looking rifle. Awesome job. Really impressive 👍
Thank you very much
Wow, awesome job!
Thanks!
Good save
Thank you!
Awesome!!!
Thanks!!
Absolutely love that gun! Stellar job my friends! Happy new years to you both!
Thanks buddy we appreciate it happy New Year to you too
Great job man
Thank you very much!
Well done.
Thank you very much!
Very nicely done!
Thank you very much!
very nice. good job.
Thank you very much!
Great work!
Thanks!
Beautiful gun and amazing restoration work. Kept it functional and true.
Thank you, we appreciate the kind words, thanks for watching!
@@TheKinzlerBros qq - after dipping the hot metal part in the blueing solution, how long does it stay there?
You then transfer it into the water container - is it just a quick wash or it stays there for some time?
Thanks
Excelente.
Thanks!
Nice caliber, nice rifle, well done!
Thank you very much, we appreciate it
Nice work.
Thanks!
Sweet looking Mauser. Great work
Thank you very much we appreciate it
Well done
Thanks!
Only one test fire shot before putting it up on your shoulder you sir are braver then I
More than one test shot went through just does not all get in the video. Thanks for watching
Designed for Czechoslovakian Gendarmerie as vz16/33 to replace obsolete Mannlicher M95 rifles. Variant 12/33 was for South America export.
Thanks for the info and for watching we appreciate it!
Another fine Specimen! Thanks for the share!
Thanks for watching!
Great restoration
Thank you very much
Krásná práce, Mauser vz33, karabiny českých četníků ❤, podobná je karabina vz24 a ta byla pro vojsko ❤
Thank you very much and yes you are correct, thanks for watching we appreciate it!
Nice work, as always!
Thank you very much!
Great job!!!
Thanks for watching
Не знаю как вы, но я бы применил технологию напыления металла на те ужасные каверны. Такие компактные и ручные установки уже давно есть. И они напыляют очень точечно. Сердце кровью обливается, когда вижу такие каверны от ржавчины.
I don't like to lose the roll marks on the metal! Thanks for watching
Beautiful restoration man, keeping it original is so perfect unlike some guy I watched "restoring" a kar98 and through away the food furniture. You man are awesome
th-cam.com/video/ERQ4m36xTLk/w-d-xo.html
Thank you very much Chance I appreciate it and thank you for watching!
That wood is probably going "AAAAAHHHHH"😁
Right!, thanks for watching
Very very very nice
Thanks we appreciate it!
Chemical stripping of the furniture rather than sanding helps to keep the character. Great looking results though.
That's what I hear, thanks we appreciate it!
Oven cleaner @@TheKinzlerBros
Чехи - одни из лучших оружейников мира ,с вековыми традициями !!!
I have no doubt they are beautiful guns thanks for watching
Damn dude, good job.
Thank you very much!
May I suggest that you try using a scraper on the wood first before using sandpaper.. And if you do use sandpaper, you should wrap if around a hard sponge or a similar type of backer. Using sandpaper with just your finger pressure will result in uneven levels of sanding. Otherwise great job!
Thanks for the advice and tips, thanks for watching!
Love the restoration the only thing I could say is that if you use a rolled spring steel scraper like the guys over at anvil the wood finish comes off without taking of any of the wood
Thank you very much and thanks for the advice, thanks for the support and for watching!
Awesome 👍
Thank you!
Beautiful
Thank you
@@TheKinzlerBros you’re welcome
Nice job.
Thanks!
Nicely done.😊
Thanks
It really great !!! Thank you for sharing 👍👍
Thank you very much and thank you for watching
Good job
Thanks
Nice 👍🏽
Thanks!
You should check out mark Novak and how he uses a scraper to clean up gunked up stocks. One reason he does it is so his sandpaper doesn’t get immediate clogged and lose its cutting ability like yours seemed to
Ya I have, thanks for watching
Vídeo show , e ainda com teste no final👍🏾
Thank you very much, thanks for watching
Really nice restoration of this Mauser. Most of the time the contract mausers instead of being 7.92 or 8mm. Yours is 7 x 57. I have a Chilean mauser that was a contract mauser and it is 7x 57. Still a very nice operating rifle. Great job
Thank you very much, yes they are beautiful guns. Thanks for watching!
Fez um bom restauro, parabéns.
🇧🇷. 👍.
Thank you very much
Nice restoration but you forgot to remove the spring ring of the handguard around the barrel before blasting. Normally the ring has two little screws and is placed where the foam was.
Like a spanish La Coruna Mauser.
Thanks, ya sometimes you miss stuff. Thanks for watching!