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Israeli Mauser K98k Sniper Rifles: Wild Heerbrug & Nimrod (Ad-free)

The best firearms reference books: https://www.headstamppublishing.com The first Israeli military sniper rifles were German K98k snipers obtained by the nascent Israeli armed forces in the late 1940s. These were used in Israel's independence war, and served well. When the IDF decided to adopt the 7.62mm NATO cartridge and converted its Mauser rifles to that caliber using new barrels, the best-shooting examples were help aside for use as sniper rifles. These were initially fitted with Swiss Wild Heerbrug 4x30mm scopes, using a rather unusual (and not particularly good) QD mounting system. After experience against Dragunov rifles in the 1967 Six Day War, the IDF moved to adopt semiauto sniper platforms, including the 7.62mm Galatz and the M14. These were fitted with more modern optics which were then available, in particular Japanese-made 6x40 and 10x40 Nimrods. The K98k snipers were moved down to territorial use, and over time many of them were fitted with those improved scopes. Thanks to Mayer Antiques and MCT Defense for helping me with this video! http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons http://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.forgottenweapons.com

Comments

sean

I have a put together one on later FN receiver. Also not very consistent accuracy wise thought it was me

Guido Schriewer

nlthough an israely mauser in 762 would be kind of the the mauser I'd buy. that mount is just horrible.

Bob Betts

Gee, Ian, you'd think that even a non-gun engineer would be aware of recoil forces. I'm surprised that someone didn't just pickup a gun catalog and see the American scope mount offerings from Weaver, Redfield, Leopold, Lyman and Williams and get the idea that their scope mount dovetails were 90-degrees wrong. Anyhow, thanks for all the other info ... a very interesting piece of K98k history.