"AFAIK all foreign guns were taken down, and fully reconditioned, often but not always all the waffenamt were obliterated, renumbered, then stored neatly away separating all the parts, (barrels with all the barrels, stocks with all the other stocks, frames ect...)"
None of the RC K98s or pistols I've ever seen would support this premise. Most RC K98s I've seen are largely complete and matching, with a mismatched bolt or other small part being typical. This would indicate complete guns were stores and only small parts that needed replacement were added before releasing the weapons for issue or sale.
Why would they have completely disassembled a rifle or pistol, which had been expertly hand assembled, seated, bedded, trimmed etc. and split the components up, only to have to carefully assemble a jumble of unlike parts later? The Russians had space to spare to stack complete rifles like cordwood as far as the eye could see. Removal of the bolts is the only measure I could see that would allow "control" over the inventory and insurance that live guns were not finding their way out the back door.
In fact, a quite plausible reason for the "Bullseye" VoPo grips I have heard is that captured Lugers were dumped wholesale into 55 gallon drums full of oil as a storage method. When removing the pistols for issue, they found that the long term oil immersion had turned the wood grips to putty, thus the development of the "plastic" grips for issue.
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