Oooh, I see, everyone ignore Agdune's ramblings. You's are all in on it, I know!
Anyway, I have a mk4 Lee enfield (middling quality, I don't particularly like it. Feels nasty to shoot and the worn out barrel takes forever to clean afterwards, due to all the pitting and pockmarks hiding soot from my cleaning patches) and an Isreali K98 manufactured in Brno, rechambered to 7.62mm and evidently left in storage untill recently. I love that one, it feel good to shoot, it's damn accurate and the bore is in near-pristine condition. After looking it up I'm strongly tempted to think it might be one of the first 4500 bought by Isreal, especially since it, y'know, makes sense, being Chech made, having the nice 7.62 burned into the butt and etched into the receiver. Kinda weird to think it was probably actually used over there...
The only problems I have with my beloved mauser whatsoever is that A) whoever put it in storage must've dipped it in oil first or something, whenever it's left in anything above "really cold" surroundings the woodwork weeps oil. I often have to wipe it down with a rag while using it, it gets so bad. B) Whatever gunsmith who did the rechambering failed to make sure the saftey worked afterwards. Y'know the little latch on the back of the K98 which you can flip up and/or over to hold the firing pin back? Yeah, the back end of the firing pin was turned around and now there's no little groove for the latch to go into. So, it's less safe than the average rifle to carry around.
I also recently got some hand-me-downs from my Grandfather who died of complications from leukemia earlier in the year. A heavily modified Lee-Enfield Mk4 (turned into the most bare-bones .410 shotgun I've ever seen - basically a pipe with a trigger and a butt now), a .22 Air rifle and an ancient feeling little Lithglow model B .22 rifle (much like this one:
http://www.owenguns.com/used-guns/lithgow-%E2%80%93-slazanger-model-b-single-shot-22-long-rifle/). It's all rusted up and has wood worms in the butt. Still, it's cool, like using a home-made gun almost, it's so simply constructed. Even have to cock the firing pin manually!
Oh, and I also have one of those new-fangled Brno .22 CZ 452-2E thingies. (Identical to:
http://i134.photobucket.com/albums/q114/dancz/Rimfire/CZ452-2E22Mag.jpg) It's nice, cheap, simple and will last forever.
Unfortunately I live 300km from where I store the guns (at my parents). So obviously, I don't get to shoot much.