Karabiner 98 kurz, often abbreviated Karabiner 98k, Kar98k or K98k and sometimes incorrectly referred to as a K98, is a bolt-action rifle chambered for the 7.
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Karabiner 98 kurz, often abbreviated Karabiner 98k, Kar98k or K98k and sometimes incorrectly referred to as a K98, is a bolt-action rifle chambered for the 7.
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The Karabiner 98k therefore continues to appear in conflicts across the world as they are taken out of storage during times of strife.
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The Karabiner 98k was derived from earlier rifles, namely the Mauser Standardmodell of 1924 and the Karabiner 98b, which in turn had both been developed from the Gewehr 98.
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Since the Karabiner 98k rifle was shorter than the earlier Karabiner 98b, the new rifle was given the designation Karabiner 98 kurz, meaning "Carbine 98 Short".
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Karabiner 98k is a controlled-feed bolt-action rifle based on the Mauser M98 system.
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When issued the Karabiner 98k came accompanied with assorted accessory items including a sling, a protective muzzle cover, and for field maintenance a Reinigungsgerat 34 or RG34 kit.
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Early production ZF41 were matched, zeroed and fitted on Karabiner 98k rifles selected for being exceptionally accurate at the factory before issue.
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Snipers, Karabiner 98k rifles selected for being exceptionally accurate during factory tests were fitted with a telescopic sight as sniper rifles.
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Experimental versions of the Karabiner 98k intended for the German paratroopers that could be transported in shortened modes were produced.
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Karabiner 98k receivers were stamped with a factory code indicating date and location of manufacture.
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Mauser Karabiner 98k rifle was widely used by all branches of the armed forces of Germany during World War II.
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One example of Soviet-captured Mauser KarKarabiner 98k rifles being used in post-WWII conflicts is the Korean War, where a number of these rifles were provided by the Soviet Union to Chinese Communist forces to supplement their supply of Type Zhongzheng rifles.
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The Vietnam War would become another example with Soviet-capture Mauser Karabiner 98k rifles being provided to North Vietnam by the USSR as military aid.
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Many Soviet-capture Karabiner 98k rifles were found in the hands of Viet Cong guerrillas and People's Army of Vietnam soldiers by US, South Vietnamese, South Korean, Australian and New Zealand forces alongside Soviet-bloc rifles like the Mosin–Nagant, the SKS, and the AK-47.
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Norway's captured Karabiner 98k rifles were soon superseded as a standard issue weapon by the US M1 Garand, but remained in service as Norwegian Home Guard weapons until the 1990s, in which role they were rebarreled for the.
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In West Germany, the Karabiner 98k were issued to the Bundesgrenzschutz, which was originally organized along paramilitary lines and armed as light infantry; in the 1950s.
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Former German Karabiner 98k rifles were widely distributed throughout the Eastern Bloc, some being refurbished two or three times by different factories.
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The refurbished Pr?duzece 44 Karabiner 98k rifles were still being used in the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s.
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Many, though not all, Israeli-used German surplus Mauser Karabiner 98k rifles have had their Nazi Waffenamt markings and emblems stamped over with Israel Defense Forces and Hebrew arsenal markings.
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The Israeli Karabiner 98k utilized the same bayonet design as in German service, with a barrel ring added.
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Some Karabiner 98k rifles were fitted with new, unnumbered beech stocks of recent manufacture, while others retained their original furniture.
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Karabiner 98k rifle was used by the reserve branches of the IDF well into the 1960s and 1970s and saw action in the hands of various support and line-of-communications troops during the 1967 Six-Day War and the 1973 Arab-Israeli War.
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The Mauser Karabiner 98k rifle remains popular among many rifle shooters and military rifle collectors due to the rifle's historical background, as well as the availability of both new and surplus 7.
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