I am sorry to hear this
Grumpy
I have just one question: was your extractor beveled to allow loading the rifle by snapping the extractor over a cartridge already in the chamber, and is this how you used it?
For info, here is what I had posted a while back on the issue:
The misguided practice of beveling the extractor to allow closing the bolt on a cartridge already in the chamber creates two issues:
1) Beveling a Mauser extractor to create the space for it to jump the rim inside the front bridge when closing the bolt, inevitably also creates the space for it to potentially jump the rim when opening the bolt, hence potentially fail to extract. The extractor therefore looses its "Mauser infallibility" and becomes no different from a Remington extractor, or Sako, or etc. etc.
2) Removing material from the extractor to create the space for it to jump the rim automatically weakens it at the two points where it is already the most vulnerable, therefore it CANNOT be as strong as one designed not to do so (this is simple materials physics), AND it creates the possibility for the extractor to be flexed upward which inevitably causes metal fracture, visible when it breaks, or invisible when the fracture is internal before breaking, because it is forced to flex UPWARD, AGAINST ITS RADIUS (the extractor is not flat but radiused to the round contour of the bolt).
Contrary to popular belief, there is no such thing as a "correctly beveled" extractor. The misunderstanding generally comes from the fact that folks typically do not understand which parts of the extractor is bevelled, and to what purpose. If in addition to beveling the top of the extractor, it is also beveled on the hook to facilitate it slipping over the cartridge in the chamber, this creates two weak points and a possibility of fracture of either or both the extracting hook and the extractor blade. I hope the drawing helps visualize...
If your extractor broke at either of these two points...
View attachment 661569
... the fix is simple and fail-proof: replace the extractor with one that has not been beveled. Your rifle will instantly return to the original Mauser design and will be 100% reliable.
If what I am discussing is your situation, your rifle did not betray you, but it was betrayed itself when the extractor was misguidedly beveled at the factory or later. Restoring it to its true Mauser design with an unbeveled extractor is easy and will return it to Mauser infallibility.
I hope this helps