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Hunting
The Basics, Starting Out
7mm mauser?
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<blockquote data-quote="shortgrass" data-source="post: 840852" data-attributes="member: 24284"><p><strong><em>Any</em></strong> Mauser receiver that's been welded on, like the one pictured, is not worth messing with. A mud engineer is not a metallurgist, a welder or even an employee at a heat treating firm. If it's now yours, do as you wish with it. ObamaCare will take care of you (or will it?)! Most things won't grow back (eyes, fingers,,,, you get the idea). For what would be spent fixing that one, if it could be 'fixed' , you could buy two good ones! This is the same arguement as salvaging firearms from a fire. NO firearm, butchered, salvaged or not, is worth the risk of potential injury. No competent gunsmith would work with the like of what is pictured (and I'll bet it looks even worse when in hand). The one pictured has been <em>'butchered'</em>. The stock is nothing more than a re-worked military.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="shortgrass, post: 840852, member: 24284"] [B][I]Any[/I][/B] Mauser receiver that's been welded on, like the one pictured, is not worth messing with. A mud engineer is not a metallurgist, a welder or even an employee at a heat treating firm. If it's now yours, do as you wish with it. ObamaCare will take care of you (or will it?)! Most things won't grow back (eyes, fingers,,,, you get the idea). For what would be spent fixing that one, if it could be 'fixed' , you could buy two good ones! This is the same arguement as salvaging firearms from a fire. NO firearm, butchered, salvaged or not, is worth the risk of potential injury. No competent gunsmith would work with the like of what is pictured (and I'll bet it looks even worse when in hand). The one pictured has been [I]'butchered'[/I]. The stock is nothing more than a re-worked military. [/QUOTE]
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The Basics, Starting Out
7mm mauser?
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