Blowing up a M98!!

jbmauser

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Rating - 100%
197   0   0
Location
Mauser Oberndorf
Well earlier I posted some pics of a K98k I restored and thought I'd post this as sort of an "un-restoration." :D

I bought this badly sportered M98 that had been burnt to a crisp at some point in its life. Amazingly even though it had been badly burnt and the barrel could be turned off by hand, the owner had been using it for hunting for years. He had simply replaced all the springs and kept shooting it!

I salvaged what parts I could off it and decided to have some fun with the barrel, receiver, and bolt. Since it was chambered in .30-06 I thought the best way to blow it up was to fill a 8mm Mauser casing full of Bullseye and seat a .323 dia, 185gr bullet on top.

Obviously doing this was inherently dangerous and I don't recommend anyone try this at home. It was fired remotely with a string and I was well protected by several inches of steel. The barreled action was behind a large gravel pile. Several fragments of the barrel were never found.

It is interesting that even though there was some pretty serious setback of the reciever locking lug areas, the bolt held. The bullet is lodged in the barrel about half way down.


Here it is mounted in my highly scientific test platform.:p
HPIM5672.jpg


Here are a few pics of the aftermath. Notice the piece of the barrel stuck in the tire, the neat "cutaway view" of the chamber and the mostly intact action.
HPIM5673.jpg

HPIM5674.jpg

HPIM5675.jpg

HPIM5676.jpg

HPIM5678.jpg
 
Last edited:
Well done sir! It proves that your fire-damaged mauser could not hold up to a case full of Bullseye behind a bore obstruction, but it also shows the possible path of destruction that could ensue. Great pics.

I did practically the same thing a few years ago with a "Cooey Carcano". Not fire-damaged, just in it's original alleged fragile state, and it held up wonderfully to a case full of Unique and a heavy bullet - approx 100K psi. Not at all the same pressures as you subjected your old girl to, but not far off.
 
Looks like a good time. LOL. No quite as catastrophic as i imagined it. Would be been more dramatic in a stock. haha

Man!!! I think dramatic would have been an understatement for sure if a person was holding that when it went off.At the very least if you came out of it unscathed a change of underwear would be in order!
 
Well done sir! It proves that your fire-damaged mauser could not hold up to a case full of Bullseye behind a bore obstruction, but it also shows the possible path of destruction that could ensue. Great pics.

I did practically the same thing a few years ago with a "Cooey Carcano". Not fire-damaged, just in it's original alleged fragile state, and it held up wonderfully to a case full of Unique and a heavy bullet - approx 100K psi. Not at all the same pressures as you subjected your old girl to, but not far off.

Thanks Andy. I have read your excellent thread about the Cooey Carcano's and it was sort of the inspiration for this test, although I fully expected the burnt Mauser to fail in some area.
 
Good call "deactivating" that gun. I've restored a m1917 that went through a house fire but I drilled the chamber, cut the firing pin and epoxied the bore. I restored it for sentimental reasons but didn't trust the new temper. Could be very dangerous
 
Back
Top Bottom