I have the sister of that one, before and after photosI was going to guess a type b Oberndorf Mauser sporter but that rounded pistol grip throws me off as does the bent bolt. You could post some better pictures with lighting so we can see the action more clearly and any markings of course.he sister f
Continue down the Mauser rabbit hole with this little beauty as a potential cousin/ comparison:
https://www.gunsinternational.com/g...--checkered-walnut-stock.cfm?gun_id=101528564


Yup, immediately thought the same. If the bore is in good condition, it would be a great project to restore it.It appears to be a sporterized version of the Mauser 98. With an unknown bore/barrel condition it should stiil be worth $150 - $200 with the double set triggers ... as a project.
If the bore is good you could have the metal refinished and the stock carefully refinished and the checkering recut for probably somewhat less than $1000
I’m wondering if this isn’t actually chambered in 280 Ross. During the era that this rifle would have been made Kynoch was a mayor ammunition manufacturer. Kynoch produced 280 Ross but called it the 280 Kynoch Rimless in Britain. Hence the KR 280? Just a guess, as others stated best to have the chamber cast.I might not automatically assume 280 remington. Lots of .284 rounds out there. 280 Remington wasn't a factory offering until the 1950's and not popular then. The K R 280 marking could be something different?
Nothing sporting about that bolt handleI think you have an Obendorf Mauser sporting rifle. It would be worth a complete clean up and restoration if the barrel is OK, if not, you have a heck of an action to build a new rifle on.
That thing just exudes class.
It is possible that the bolt had been replaced at some point. The stock, the trigger and the sights certainly look "sporter" to me. There also seems to be no stripper clip cut in the receiver.Nothing sporting about that bolt handle



























