Never seen one with the notches on bolt handle
Yeah, wonder what that signifies?? Kills?
The notches on the bolt handle indicate that the bolt had been in an 8mm rifle during the period that both 8mm and 7.62x51 rifles were in service. The 8mm rifles could be identified by touch.
Many of these rifles are mixmasters. Whether the existing bolt was the correct one for this 7.62 conversion, who knows?
I would definitely check headspace before shooting it.
If it is an Israeli conversion, (pretty certain it is) that would have been a new, made for or made by Israel, .30 caliber barrel installed - careful inspection will reveal a stamping XX/XX somewheres on the barrel - usually near or on the chamber - first two digits are the "batch number" (not the month) and second two digits are the year produced - three or four that I have looked at are mid to late 1950's so "17/56" would be 17th batch produced in 1956. "02/57" would be second batch (not February) in 1957.
Unless someone ran in a 30-06 reamer into the 7.62x51 chamber and never marked the barrel.... You will find out first time you try to chamber a 30-06 cartridge. Look in the magazine - the Isreali's installed a block to shorten the magazine length for the shorter 7.62x51 rounds, from the original 8x57. If the 1/2" spacer is still there, no way a 30-06 goes in magazine. Many commercial 30-06 loaded short enough to fit in 8x57 magazine, so if the block has been removed, might be a 30-06 - loading one by one into mag - don't need notch to eject fired 30-06 if that is what the chamber has been cut for.
And as above - several countries labeled 30-06 as "7.62" before the 7.62x51/308 Win was invented. I think the full current metric designation for 30-06 is 7.62x63.
So to OP question about value - depends on determining the actual chambering - a lot!!
The notches on the bolt handle indicate that the bolt had been in an 8mm rifle during the period that both 8mm and 7.62x51 rifles were in service. The 8mm rifles could be identified by touch.
Many of these rifles are mixmasters. Whether the existing bolt was the correct one for this 7.62 conversion, who knows?
I would definitely check headspace before shooting it.



























