Yugoslav War, Accidentally Scrubbed VZ-24

T1D.Operator

Well-known member
Figured I’d share this here. I recently picked this up, and owning a Mauser variant from the 1990s has always been a goal of mine. When I came across this one, I spoke with a few friends from the region who collect them locally, and they shared some background information.


According to them, this VZ-24 went to Zavod 44 for refurbishment. However, during the process it was discovered that the rifle didn’t actually need to be refurbished — though it was already partially through the refurb/restamp process. At some point, someone realized this and pulled it from the line, stopping further work.


The clearest indicators are the scrubbed crest and bolt, while everything else remains untouched. The Czech lion and “VZ-24” markings are still present, and the serial number was “hand-stamped” in a rushed manner just to get it back into a “normal” state for storage. I was also told that the “bottom of the barrel” workers handled situations like this at the factory — when a case like this came up, they’d just do whatever was needed to make it serviceable without redoing the rest.


Afterwards, it was stored until it was pulled out in the 1990s. All other parts are CZ and remain unaltered. Overall, it’s a gorgeous rifle and a keeper for me. I’ll be pulling it apart soon to see if I can verify anything else. Now all I need is a Yugo sniper with some trench art, lol. I included photos, and also a proper "D5 Prefix" CZ stamp, to compare to mine.

vz24-1.jpgvz24-2.jpgvz24-3.jpgvz24-5.jpgvz24-6.jpgvz24-7.jpgvz24-8.jpgvz24-proper-serial.png
 
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Strange is that the buttstock is U4 series which means a Brno production of 1938, so additional serbian Kingdom crest carved into surface of this butt, the serials D5 is from Slovakian plant Povazska Bystrica production piece which ended mostly in export, so hard to believe this was completed so by Yugoslavians? .
 
That’s part of the headache that is 1990s era Yugo war guns. Is it hard to believe that a rifle got stored for a later date? That it went through a refurb or rework? We can’t forget that they sat on M59/66’s, M48s (and all of its own variants) for decades. There were not enough rifles to arm normal military units, let alone thousands of paramilitary and even civilians.

We can’t act like the factory workers (who were not the brightest), would keep everything perfect.
 
Strange is that the buttstock is U4 series which means a Brno production of 1938, so additional serbian Kingdom crest carved into surface of this butt, the serials D5 is from Slovakian plant Povazska Bystrica production piece which ended mostly in export, so hard to believe this was completed so by Yugoslavians? .
The Serbian crest is likely just art scratched in my the nationalist who carried it as part of a militia.

I had something similar (but cruder) on an SKS I sold off years ago.
 
The U4 buttstock was most real captured by germans in 1939 in Czechoslovakia (when not send to Romania), the serbian kingdom crest could be added by serbian partisans, typical for this is that is not Yugoslavia but Serbian crest, the metall also receiver and barell should be joined probably in USA after mixage of parts. The buttstock was reserialed to 358 which is not anywhere visible, so the metall and buttstock are from different rifles. Unfortunally the bolt serial was removed but is czechoslovak.
 
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