

Your rifle is in very good condition so I think his price guesstimate of 400-700 is pretty good. If the buttplate is numbers matched to the rest of the rifle (minus the bolt of course) then it's probably the original disk for that rifle.Like Sharps4590 said, a mismatched bolt is fairly common and it doesn't hurt the value as much as a drop in condition would. 6.46 is the standard.Your disk is stamped at the 6.51/6.46 so that is your actual groove/land diameter when it was checked at the armory.Now, all of this assumes that the stock is original. 6.51 would be standard, but if it was larger then you would replace the last digit '1' with whichever one was stamped.Lower row is the land diameter. 3 would be a lot of corrosion and pitting throughout the entire bore.Ī 4 condition was considered unserviceable and the barrel would be replaced so it's not included on the tag.Section 3: Two rows of numbers.Upper row is the groove diameter. 1 would be very minimal corrosion shadowing or darkening but no pitting. 0 (no number marked) would be a perfect bore. Yours is 2 so that stands for some rust or corrosion on both the lands and grooves of the rifling. If it had a number, that would be the amount of hold-over required.Section 2:'1 2 3' Refers to the condition of the bore. Your rifle has no number stamped between the words so this rifle apparently hit point of aim with the m/41 cartridge when it was tested. One streck equals one decimeter at 100 meters. 'Overslag' means hold-over.how far to hold the front sight over the bullseye to compensate for the different trajectory of the m/41 cartridge. The info is from the last time it went through a government armory.Section 1: When the rifle was built, the issue cartridge was the m/94 156gr round nose bullet and that is what the sights were originally regulated for.' Torpedam' refers to the pointed 140gr spitzer bullet used in the m/41 cartridge, which was introduced in 1941. They're sweet rifles to shoot and the accuracy is almost always superb, even if the bore is in pretty bad shape.As for the stock disk info, there are three sections. Yep, I love my Swedes! Definitely take it out and spend some range time with it! Even with the mismatched bolt, it is a very nice looking example too.I'd love to add that one to my collection. Welcome to TFF!Yes, that would be an m/96 rifle.
