"Like New" Yugo M48 Mausers?

I'll try and take some photos.
Like a kid at Christmas, I immediately tore it apart and cleaned all of the Cosmo off. It is still stripped down, and I looking to get all of the cosmoline leached out of the stock prior to re-oiling.
 
I got mine yesterday. Was number 52 pictured in Weimajack earlier last week. Looks good to me and I have one other and a M48BO. Can't wait to clean it up. In fact it's 6am and I'm heading downstairs like a kid on Christmas to start :)
 
They made 1.5 million of them and they are almost all "new". I like milsurps and I certainly love mausers, but for me they actually need to to have some military significance.
 
The M48 Yugo rifles shoot really well, as with most mauser rifles of the day. I picked up an M48BO from Marstar half a dozen years ago, brand new in the grease and unfired. They compare well with any of my Kar98s.
 
They made 1.5 million of them and they are almost all "new". I like milsurps and I certainly love mausers, but for me they actually need to to have some military significance.

That is not really accurate.

For starters, we are lucky in Canada that most of the ones our importers got were In decent shape. The very great majority of these guns were pretty beat up. The worst ones went to the USA where sarco and century sold them cheap. Many were under $100 back in the late 90's and early 2000's as "gunsmith specials".

Also, even the ones that are in storage grease are usually refurbs. These guns were almost all used for training as Yugoslavia had conscription and mandatory service. They rebuilt their guns regularly. Look under your bolt handle. If the 3 digit assembly
Number does not match the one in the barrel and receiver under the wood, your gun has been rebuilt at the factory at least once.

Many of these guns also saw use in the civil war there 25 years ago. It's not unusual to see these guns with carvings in the stocks from the war in the us where the more abused rifles ended up.

These have plenty of history. Just not in WW2.
 
The M48 Yugo rifles shoot really well, as with most mauser rifles of the day. I picked up an M48BO from Marstar half a dozen years ago, brand new in the grease and unfired. They compare well with any of my Kar98s.

Did you shoot it or put it in the safe? Sometimes it's better getting a shooter grade rifle that you actually take to the range and don't care if it gets marked up.

It may be conjecture whether a mint M48 is unfired or not... my shooter grade M48 had a brand new bore. I'm sure they saw some sort of refurb before going into grease.

I saw one on the EE listed as "unissued" and it was beat up like crazy. Don't understand how that would be found out other than guessing.

Looks like Weimajack has 8 left.
 
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Mine turned out fine.

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Refurb or not, fantastic looking.
 
Here is mine. There were 6 ordered from Tradex for my buddy's shop, and this one was the one I thought was nicest. I had hoped there would be a walnut stocked M48B, but there was only one and it was a beat up refurb with a re-numbred walnut stock and obviously renumbered bolt and floor plate. Interestingly, that one was still in the cellophane bag that some dealers are charging a premium for. I passed on it and settled on this nice elm-stocked M48.

PS: If I was buying again, I'd get one from Weimarjack. He's at least taking photos, hand selecting and grading this guns. Not even Jean at P&S is doing that this time. And to be frank, half the rifles I picked through were pretty rough, so it's worth getting a hand pick IMHO.

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I did shoot it today also. I had thought I got most of the cosmo out, but after 10 rounds in the hot sun, it started leaching out of the handguard again. I suspect it will do this for some time to come. Oh well.

The bore is about perfect and the rifle grouped reasonably well at 100m using old Turk 154gn surplus rounds. With these hot rounds, the gun was shooting about 6 to 8" high, which I expected as the battle sight is 200m. I'll try some 198gn ullets next and see what it does.
 
I like the dark stock on that last one. Is if dark elm, or is it walnut?

I'm not fully sure. It can't be walnut, I have some unfinished in blanks for oen turning and it's not like that. More reddish than dark brown. I used a combination of sun, and inside a black garbage bag in the sun today to wipe all the cosmoline out. Toothbrush, mineral spirits and plenty of shop cloths. I would have to venture elm but I would be guessing.
 
I'm in the process of cleaning and the bluing is 99%, bore is 100% perfect, all #'s match, every part has a "BK" stamped in a circle, stock looks like European Elm but is of a dark walnut colour (flash makes it look lighter). Extremely impressed, the UHG looks like it was taken out of the same block of wood, almost identical grain and colour.

Very happy indeed.
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So who or what is BK?
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Nice ST1264.

These may not be the "angels-from-the-heavens singing paradises" Czech VZ24s but the one I have is pretty good. Bolt and wood all match. Barrel bands are rough as usual but I will take mine out this week and put some rounds down range. Odds are the pristine ones will only last so long and then we're all going to be watching EE for the gems.

I think this thread was about the M48s but I was getting confused.
 
Did you shoot it or put it in the safe? Sometimes it's better getting a shooter grade rifle that you actually take to the range and don't care if it gets marked up.

It may be conjecture whether a mint M48 is unfired or not... my shooter grade M48 had a brand new bore. I'm sure they saw some sort of refurb before going into grease.

I saw one on the EE listed as "unissued" and it was beat up like crazy. Don't understand how that would be found out other than guessing.

Looks like Weimajack has 8 left.


The M48BO rifles were produced for a military contract that fell through. They were never sold, nor issued, and sat in the crates for 50+ years. Marstar had these six or eight years ago, and they were indeed "unfired and un-issued".
 
The M48BO rifles were produced for a military contract that fell through. They were never sold, nor issued, and sat in the crates for 50+ years. Marstar had these six or eight years ago, and they were indeed "unfired and un-issued".

My experiences with the BO rifles differs from yours substantially. For example, there were multiple production runs of the BO rifles, this is pretty clear. Roughly half are M48's and the other half are M48B's. No M48A BO rifles has yet surfaced that were not obvious refurbs.

Milled M48 rifles were only made from 1950 to 1952, this includes the BO versions. Only 238,515 M48 variant rifles were made. This is an established fact from the Zastava factory records.

M48A production ran from 1953 through 1956, during which time it appears no BO rifles were made. The M48B rifles, including the second batch of BO variants, were made from 1956 onward.

Many BO rifles were imported to Canada and the US in obviously used condition and many examples also show evidence of being re-worked. It's also possible (and even likely) that BO rifles have been assembled with recycled parts from Yugoslavian military stocks, but with markings scrubbed.

I have personally owned a number of M48 series rifles, including BO variants, where there are obvious pre-1948 proof stamps (T supplanted by either a crown or star) on some parts, such as the bolt body. This could only occur if parts were cannibalized off earlier worn out rifles and re-used in the refurbishment process or during production. MY current M48 rifle from Tradex has a re-manufactured bolt on it that would originally have been on an M1924 carbine. The bolt has a more serpentine bend to the handle than a typical M48 bolt and the proof stamp is a T with a star over it, not a BK in a circle like a typical post-48 bolt. All the parts on the bolt body itself are later production parts.

Brando Bogdanovic (author of "Serbian and Yugoslav Mauser Rifles") and I used to correspond about this back when he had just released his book. It was Branko's opinion that many of the rifles being sold in north america had been very recently referred to facilitate the sales to American surplus dealers. It's been years since we've spoken, but I trusted his opinion back than, at the time he was the official historian for the zastava factory.

Here's an interesting photo for you:

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Notice the assembly numbers on this M24/47 rifle. All M48 variants also have this assembly number present. The very great majority of M48's in Canada have bolts with mis-matched assembly numbers, despite having a matching serial number. This is effectively proof that most of these rifles are rebuilt. If you check M48BO's, many of them are similarly mis-matched for assembly numbers.

I pulled the hand guards off two of the 6 current batch trades guns I had access to, and on both, the assembly number for the bolt did NOT match the barrelled action, so both were refurbs, despite no outward appearance of overhaul. The gun I kept also has a non-matching assembly number. It would be fun to see more owners post their assembly number results as they clean their guns.

Another interesting bit of data. Next to the assembly numbers, there is often one or more punch marks. This is popularly thought to be applied when a rifle was re-barelled during refurbishment. On all the guns I've owned with pristine bores, these punch marks were present, and sometimes more than one punch mark is found denoting multiple overhauls, at least two of which involved new barrels. When the shooter grade guns were sold in the USA in the early 2000's, I seem to recall many had matching assembly numbers and less nice bores - and few had punch marks.
 
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Yes thanks for confirming that.
Do the serial numbers correspond with production dates?
This is a m48a I have. Repaired stock but serial number 7
 
Yes thanks for confirming that.
Do the serial numbers correspond with production dates?
This is a m48a I have. Repaired stock but serial number 7

Has to be a refurbed and renumbered stock I would gather. My stock # matches all the other Serial #'s on the rifle.

My "Assembly #" is different than the Serial #, but the assembly # matches on the action and under the bolt handle.
 
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