I apologize; I was in error in my original reply to this post. I finished reading it just now.
So the "Oberndorf" style is the inside-the-trigger guard one as described in the excerpt?
All of a sudden , the huge male Hunting Leopard hurled itself upon us from close range . He had been cunningly and vengefully lying in wait for us , among the long grass . My client snapped his rifle up to his shoulder ... in a desperate attempt to shoot the charging , enraged animal . Unfortunately, the Hunting Leopard had gotten ahold of the rifle’s muzzle between it’s vice like jaws . It aggressively tugged at the rifle . While my client desperately struggled to hold onto his rifle ... his knuckle accidentally struck the release button of the rifle’s magazine floor plate ( which , like all Mauser 98 actioned rifles... was located inside the bow of the trigger guard . This set up is referred to , as “ Oberndorf Style “ . ) . The magazine floor plate sprung open and all four of my client’s 10.75x68 mm Mauser caliber RWS soft nosed cartridges had dropped onto the ground . The rifle was now as useless as a big stick .
I find that most curious since, as I mentioned, only one military-issued rifle had that style and most of the Mauser 98 sporting rifle's I've seen feature the horizontally-turning lever fitted directly to the floorplate. I suppose that the floorplate-mounted lever would require a more deliberate action to move, although if it were to get caught on something...
But as I initially said, a hinged floorplate at all is certainly one more thing to go wrong and I'm rethinking my interest in them. Perhaps a simple button to aid in removing the floorplate would be better; it would still take a deliberate action to remove it and not
immediately risk dumping the cartridges on the ground at an unfortunate moment.