So, generally, they were stored without the bolts. Well, even with the bent bolt, the only way they would stack this way was to remove the bolts. At the end of World War II, captured Mauser rifles were often "stacked" on pallets with one row going one way and then another row going the other and so on until there was a block or brick of rifles approximately 4ft x 4ft x 4ft. The stamped barrel band is also standard for the BNZ Steyr rifles. The waffenamt 77 is one of the standard military acceptance codes for Steyr. The single number "4" on the receiver is known as as a "type 2" marking and indicates manufacture in 1944. Originally when Steyr started making Mausers, it used the code "660" to identify its rifles, but then changed to BNZ in 1941, reportedly after exhausting parts that had been supplied to it by other manufacturers. The BNZ markings were the German ordnance code for weapons made by Steyr-Daimler-Puch AG, at Steyr Austria. ![]() Welcome and thanks for posting your questions about your Mauser.
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