Its interesting that in the late war stuff they cut corners everywhere, but not the sight hood! I guess the nazis really hated a glare on the front blade.
The fact that it has a cleaning rod is also very interesting. At this point even the K98k wasn't being equipped with one.
Possible! I can't make out a slot on it like the typical k98k cleaning rod and the end appears rounded. Wouldn't that be interesting if you had to push back on that to pop the empty out.Who's to say it's not the extractor, ejector ?
Grizz
I like the K43 mag...if it is original to a bolt action rifle can we have them at 10 rounds!!!!
Now I'd love to see a build of one of these. I wonder if there are blueprints out there somewhere?In other news, if I had a blueprint of that rifle, I bet I could make it. It does not look that complicated. The receiver flats are pretty basic, I think I could machine the stamping dies and bend the parts in a hydraulic arbor press.
Hardest part would be finding a G43 mag for under $500 - lol.
Ah! Good info. Thanks for posting that.Had a look in W. Darrin Weaver's "Desperate Measures". The rod under the barrel is probably a stacking rod. Not a cleaning rod. These rifles were primarily made at a Spreewerke plant in occupied Czechoslovakia, and possibly in Danzig. The front sight hood isn't a hood. The front sight housing is a metal pressing, with a separate blade, riveted to the barrel. In the course of researching his book, he was able to locate thirty odd specimens. Most disappeared into the meat grinder of the Eastern Front.
From the standpoint of making a VG repro, a VK98 would be the easiest. For a scratch built project, the VG1 would likely be easier than a VG2. Usually the barrels for the 1 and 2 were ex-Luftwaffe machine gun barrels.
None of the purpose built VG weapons really amounted to much. Too little, too late. Mannlicher Carcanos and Panzerfausts were the most common Volkssturm weapons.
A little off tangent, but that reminds me of stumbling across a Volkssturm cemetery in the Arnsberger Wald, Nord-Rhein Westphalen on the German day of remembrance.
There was a brass bound book open on a pedestal in the covered rotunda with the names of the interred and I asked my German wife to translate the preamble. It said that most of the buried had fallen elsewhere and been relocated there after the war. They were largely the very old and the very young.
It went on to say that it was doubly tragic that they had died in the final days of a war that had already been lost long before.
All of a sudden I became very conscious of my military haircut and the Canadian Army Europe plates on my VW, and I respectfully left as German families placed flowers at grave markers.
A little off tangent, but that reminds me of stumbling across a Volkssturm cemetery in the Arnsberger Wald, Nord-Rhein Westphalen on the German day of remembrance.
There was a brass bound book open on a pedestal in the covered rotunda with the names of the interred and I asked my German wife to translate the preamble. It said that most of the buried had fallen elsewhere and been relocated there after the war. They were largely the very old and the very young.
It went on to say that it was doubly tragic that they had died in the final days of a war that had already been lost long before.
All of a sudden I became very conscious of my military haircut and the Canadian Army Europe plates on my VW, and I respectfully left as German families placed flowers at grave markers.




























