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A post-war Yugoslavian version of the Mauser 98k. Although similar in general appearance to that of the German rifle, many of the parts of these two rifles are not interchangable, such as the [[bolt]]. M48s are regarded as a military surplus firearm and can be collected at a generally cheap price due to the numbers manufactured.
A post-war Yugoslavian version of the Mauser 98k. Although similar in general appearance to that of the German rifle, many of the parts of these two rifles are not interchangable, such as the [[bolt]]. The main difference between the M48 and the K98 is that the M48 uses an intermediate-length receiver. They are usually easily identified by the top handguard which extends behind the rear sight, and ends just in front of the receiver ring. M48s are regarded as a military surplus firearm and can be collected at a generally cheap price due to the numbers recently imported from Europe. There is no current data on the number of M48's produced.

==Versions==
There are three main versions of the M48.

'''M48:''' The initial version of the M48, with full crest and cast iron parts.
'''M48A:''' Essentially similar to the M48, the M48A used sheet metal stampings instead of cast steel in certain areas, notably the magazine floorplate. Generally these rifles are built to looser tolerences. It is the most commonly encounted version of the M48.
'''M48BO:''' "Without Markings" these are otherwise similar to the M48A, but without the Yugoslavian crest on the receiver. These were intended to be shipped to the Middle East, but the contract was never finalised.

==Combat Use==

Most M48's were put into government storage shortly after they were manufactured. Most M48's that are encountered in the United States and Australia today show only slight wear - usually from storage. They are usually sold coated in the protective grease 'cosmoline' which needs to be cleaned out before the rifle is fired.

As such the M48 only saw limited use in the 1991 Yugoslavian Civil war. Often the m48 was used as the basis for a sniper rifle, drilled and tapped for the ZRAK 4x32 scope and mounts.

There is no current data on the number of M48's produced.


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Revision as of 17:19, 29 October 2006

A post-war Yugoslavian version of the Mauser 98k. Although similar in general appearance to that of the German rifle, many of the parts of these two rifles are not interchangable, such as the bolt. The main difference between the M48 and the K98 is that the M48 uses an intermediate-length receiver. They are usually easily identified by the top handguard which extends behind the rear sight, and ends just in front of the receiver ring. M48s are regarded as a military surplus firearm and can be collected at a generally cheap price due to the numbers recently imported from Europe. There is no current data on the number of M48's produced.

Versions

There are three main versions of the M48.

M48: The initial version of the M48, with full crest and cast iron parts. M48A: Essentially similar to the M48, the M48A used sheet metal stampings instead of cast steel in certain areas, notably the magazine floorplate. Generally these rifles are built to looser tolerences. It is the most commonly encounted version of the M48. M48BO: "Without Markings" these are otherwise similar to the M48A, but without the Yugoslavian crest on the receiver. These were intended to be shipped to the Middle East, but the contract was never finalised.

Combat Use

Most M48's were put into government storage shortly after they were manufactured. Most M48's that are encountered in the United States and Australia today show only slight wear - usually from storage. They are usually sold coated in the protective grease 'cosmoline' which needs to be cleaned out before the rifle is fired.

As such the M48 only saw limited use in the 1991 Yugoslavian Civil war. Often the m48 was used as the basis for a sniper rifle, drilled and tapped for the ZRAK 4x32 scope and mounts.

There is no current data on the number of M48's produced.