An original P-'14 with the rear volley-sight INTACT!!! AND a Butt Marking Disc intact!
Oh, I DO hope the barrel hasn't been bobbed!
From what we see here, restorable.
For a milsurp nut, a challenge to restore.
For a family rifle, irreplaceable, of course.
For a hunting rifle, it is capable of flattening anything in North America with one well-placed slug.
For a target rifle, it would work fine for classic matches as-is, or the rear sight can be replaced with a no-gunsmithing mount and a scope mounted. Then, you would find that it will keep up with just about ANY modern rifle built in the under-$6,000 range.... and shoot better than many of them.
Ejector spring: friend, you are SOL here. There are none. The ejector on this rifle rides through the slot in the left-hand lugs, same as any other true Mauser variant. Problem is that the SPRING was made integral with the ejector, and thus very hard: they snapped off. It was the ONLY bad point in the entire design. What I do is go to the bank and steal a ballpoint pen, take it home and disassemble the thing. I use HALF of the little spring that the retractor mechanism uses. Clean the ejector well and use ONE DROP to epoxy the little spring onto the shank, forward from where the original ejector spring has broken off, let it cure, then assemble the rifle. If you have done it right, the ejector now will function perfectly and the new spring will NOT break. I have 2 rifles here that I did this with in 1978 and they are both still working perfectly.
Nice find!
BTW, what are the markings on the butt disc? They could be very interesting.
Good luck!
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