10-1000 USD or more depending on specifics
$275-$450, depending on EXACT model and EXACT condition.
Depends on condition and originality. Anywhere from $100 to $275
It depends on a lot of factors. Is the crest still on the top? Is it the long rifle or the carbine? Does the bolt lever stand out straight or is it curved down? Do the serial numbers all match? What is the overall condition? Regardless, the range is $125.00 to 450.00. It depends on a lot of factors. Is the crest still on the top? Is it the long rifle or the carbine? Does the bolt lever stand out straight or is it curved down? Do the serial numbers all match? What is the overall condition? Regardless, the range is $125.00 to 450.00.
It would depend on the type. There was a rifle, carbine, and engineer's model. If it was in good shape, I would say that the rifles would go for $150 to $200, the carbines for $160 to $210, and the engineers (which are fairly rare) for $250 to $300. Many of these rifles were sporterized and that would lower their value somewhat.
Only 15,000 Mauser M.1891 Argentine carbines were manufactured by Ludwig Lowe, so it's relatively easy. If the serial number is A0000-A4999 or B0000-B4999 it was manufactured in 1893. If the serial number is A5000-A9999, it was manufactured in 1895. Although 30,000 carbines were originally ordered by the Argentine military, it appears that these 15,000 were the only ones delivered.
It may not even fit an 1891 Mauser. Bolts are not a "drop in" part- they may require fitting (headspacing) to that individual rifle. That is where a gunsmith earns his pay.
7.65x53, also known as the 7.65 Argentine or Belgian.
50-500 USD
Find a gunsmith and ask for help
They made those from 1890 to the early 1900's
50-200 USD or so
it means that u did a big poo