Krag-Jorgensen 1892 - 6.5X55

ronecol

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Orillia, Ontario
For those who responded initially - FYI - I listed and sold the rifle for $350.00 plus shipping. Had 3 offers to buy all within minutes of listing.


I have this Norwegian Krag 6.5X55 manufactured in 1922 which was imported in the early 60s by Globe Firearms, Ottawa and sporterized with the shortened barrel and Monte-Carlo stock.

I don't have much information on what its desirability might be or what $$ it might command in the EE? Any and all opinions or comments are appreciated.

The rifle seems to be in excellent condition. I don't see any blemishes anywhere. The blueing is solid and the wood is nice. The action is smooth and solid. The bore was a bit dirty but I gave it a good cleaning and the rifling looks sharp and no fowling. The barrel length is 21 in. and the L of P is 13 1/2 in.

Photos of the tool marks are included for whatever value or significance they may have.

Accompanying the rifle are 4 boxes (20s) of brass - (unknown how many times fired) and 3 partial boxes of bullets of various weights.

The scope is beat up a bit but shows a clear image with standard fine crosshairs. The make is Karl Kaps which is a German high quality optics firm. This one is 2.5 power X 23mm. The tube is the standard 1 inch dia. The scope is not a current model, have no idea how old it is except it was acquired in the early 60s along with the rifle. What the scope's value might be is a guess at best. It works fine on this rifle.

I'm particularly interested in a reasonable selling value.

Thanks for your time and comments.
 
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It was a 1912 Carbine Krag. Rear sight location machined on barrel near action. Seen clearly in your pics. The 1912 have both round and flat handles. Stamps look like a 1912.
The 1895/7 were 19.5 inch Carbines and actions are shorter.
The 1894 Lang Krag rifles rear sight location many inches forward.
Sporterized Krags that can be unsporterized go for 300-500.
Yours a sporter by Globe, drilled and tapped I think, hot blue,nice stock. To be used as is I would think 400-700. Plus scope.
An original all correct 1912 Carbines are few. 30,000 made but you may never handle one original. Go for 1-2 grand.
 
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Not to piss in your soup, but I would suspect that in the current era of most hunters wanting a plastic-fantastic polymer-acrylic stocked rifle in fluted stainless in at least 6.5 Turbo-Whiz Magnum topped with a 4x12 Swearoffski scope that expecting $400 to $700 would be dreaming.

But you just never know. It's a nice rifle from a certain time. It might really float somebody's boat for $350.
 
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It may be in 6.5 Mannlicher, rather than 6.5 x 55 Swedish. I have two of them. One by Global with similar stock and round bolt knob, Mannlicher. The other unknown in 6.5 Swedish with flattened bolt knob.
 
Not to piss in your soup, but I would suspect that in the current era of most hunters wanting a plastic-fantastic polymer-acrylic stocked rifle in fluted stainless in at least 6.5 Turbo-Whiz Magnum topped with a 4x12 Swearoffski scope that expecting $400 to $700 would be dreaming.

But you just never know. It's a nice rifle from a certain time. It might really float somebody's boat for $350.


I think you could get $300 to $400. Not much more than that.


Would those $$$ in your opinions include the scope or would the scope add extra value?
 
Would those $$$ in your opinions include the scope or would the scope add extra value?

The scope might have historical interest to somebody but what was perhaps a top-of-the line scope 50 or 60 years ago doesn't usually compare to a even a medium grade modern rifle scope.

I think Blastattack if pretty accurate.
 
Someone buys a beater Krag $200. Removes some military hardware. Turns down the barrel,cuts and recrowns. Gets a block of walnut does a ton of work until a finished stock is complete and fits just so. Or buys a semi inletted stock $450, hand checkers and finishes the job. Uses a Universal Jig to find top dead centre, drills, taps, or maybe a Krag does by hand. Buys a base, proper screws $50 and hope it is for European scope $100. Has steel prepped and blued either Hunter or up to black glass for $200+ . Few other things and you end up with that beautiful hunting rifle. Ain't cheap. I like it.
 
I liked that rifle and wanted to buy it, but I’ve bought 6 Norwegian Krag sporters and they’ve all shot like ####...

I’m not bothering anymore.

Beautiful rifle you had though.
 
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