On the side rail is 'T.R.Z.5' Its an industrial facility near Sarajevo.
They are the only ones I have see though. Boyds' does make a 'JRS Cassic Stock' it is a laminated wood stock for the Yugo M48. It is a little shorter than the 98 Mauser action and it will not fit into a stock for the 98 Mauser. Post war Yugo 24/47 (1947) 8mm rifles were refurbished Model 1924 FN's. Keep in mind that the Yugo 48 is not a true 98 Mauser action. It doesn't say anything about its service it just described the rifle and its markings. The concern was that the military NATO round was in the same pressure ranges as the original 7mm Mauser (45-48K) but the 308 pressure ranges went well into the 50+K range and even as high as 62K and that the Mauser action, being older, might not be able to handle those pressures. You can get the 'Mauser Military Rifles of the World' 3rd edition by Robert Ball. Post by Hobe Sound Falcon Sun 12:43 am I guess you would have to know where the M48A left off and the M-48B Started, as that would have been 1956. There was some talk on the Mil-surp forum about using 308 Winchester hunting ammo in a Chilean Mauser converted from 7mm to 7.62x51 Nato. Re: Years of Production for Yugoslavian M-48 Mauser's. The 8x57 is in the 45-48K pressure range - I'm not certain where the 350 Rem stands in this regard but if it is much higher I might tend to avoid the conversion unless I spoke with a gunsmith who knows the M48/48A action and the working pressures of the 350 Rem. Re: Yugo Mauser 24/47 Post by IronCrossWaffenSS, 20:35 And Roger thanks for the site, Correct me if I'm wrong, but it looks like a G43 in the pictures. The M48/48A is a medium length Mauser action - in that regard the length of the 350 Rem may not be the issue. I think the length is not an issue but the fat case is. Smokey: I'm not so sure it will handle that fat cartridge that easily. Note: Russian and Yugo (aka Zavasta pistol and its upgrades were manufactured in PRC (Type 51 & Type 54), in Hungary (M48, Tokagypt 58 with cartridge 9x19mm.