Post pics of your "tactical" Mosin Nagant

Status
Not open for further replies.
1943 Izzy M38, all numbers matching, counter-bored, and corked. I love this rifle. I love how it's so fun to shoot and I love how other people are afraid to shoot it. And the looks I get at the range are priceless.

dscn0647e.jpg


I don't want an aftermarket stock and I don't want a scope. I like the wood and metal sights just fine so the only tactical accessories for me are the stock sleeve and the stripper clips. Oh, and the rubber butt-pad is there to lengthen the stock, the recoil only bothered me the first day...

Like I tell everybody, It's big, it's loud, it's powerful, ammo is cheap, and it shoots a ball of flame out of the muzzle. Whats not to like?
 
Tactical Mosin Nagant M4

This one was made from parts. No collectibles were sacrificed. Click for larger photo.
 

Attachments

  • whole_view.JPG
    whole_view.JPG
    40.4 KB · Views: 253

OMG!!! Great Sergei give me strength! :what:
That is one hacked-up piggy of a Mosin!
The extinction of the dinosaurs was "an accident". This guy, has sinned against nature... I would NEVER in my life babba a gun so badly, if at all.
I hope you made him pay for it Swede. :banghead:

BUT! if we going this way, I've a few too, watch and shiver in all it's bubbafiedness...
 

Attachments

  • 200775235550_Tornado_silencer.jpg
    200775235550_Tornado_silencer.jpg
    22.7 KB · Views: 915
  • finished.jpg
    finished.jpg
    127.1 KB · Views: 250
Last edited:
1970a.jpg

M-39.jpg

This is as tactical as I need to be.
--Heavy target barrel made by Sako, hand fitted and accurized;
--Advanced tangent sights, fully screw-adjustable for windage and of course adjustable for elevation out to over a kilometer, protected by steel wings.
--Two-piece arctic birch stock able to withstand temperatures spanning 150 degrees, from deep cold to summer heat;
--Hand guard heat shield;
--Pine tar black on wood and deep bluing on steel to keep it in the shadows;
--Customized trigger, smooth as Finnish butter;
--Perfectly fitted bolt;
--Simple field takedown procedures with one tool;
--Ability to cannibalize common action parts from enemy weapons;
--Steel buttplate for rough field use and secondary use as a weapon. The entire rifle is in fact a weapon, even without ammunition.
 
Last edited:
TIMC were did you purchase the Reproduction scope and bent bolt? Also, how much did you pay for them?
 
I have a Russian Mosin 91/30 with all matching serial numbers which shoots pretty good with run of the mill military surplus ammo.

I have a Chinese Mosin 1953 carbine with four different serial numbers (receiver, bolt, magazine floorplate, buttstock) with no upper guard, forestock cut off at first band which also shoots pretty good with run of the mill military surplus ammo.

The first I will preserve as a piece of military history. This winter, the carbine may end up accessorized beyond recognition if I get snowed in again like last winter. I just don't believe in bubba-izing a military rifle in original condition, after being brainwashing into believing I HAD to "sporterize" the first three military rifles I owned between 1965 and 1980. I will bubba the heck out of what I consider to be a "beater", a ex-military gun that needs fixing up.

----------------------------------

Added: I am retired, so I claim the senior's right to repeat myself (see previous post).
 
I have a extra PU reproduction mount and scope laying around I got on sale somewhere a couple years ago for $189 that I may end up putting on my ex PU sniper.

I'd rather try to find all original PU mount and scope for it and have it installed but a gunsmith since it's the real deal. I've not shot it yet but the bore looks new! It's by far the best Mosin Nagant specimine I own.

I may have to leave the new stuff at home and have a Mil Surp range day. I have a few unfired by me mil surps than need to be put through their paces...two Mosins, a K-31, and a recently recrowned K98 and MK4 No1* Enfield.
 
Not bad photo for a camera phone ;)

Not much tactical about these - cutting edge 1930's Soviet technology.
 

Attachments

  • 2010-02-28_10.44.31.jpg
    2010-02-28_10.44.31.jpg
    277.4 KB · Views: 144
all bubbas are atrocities.

Yeah, but they're FUN atrocities. While I appreciate a well-made sport or military rifle, I'm not one bit above pulling the Bubba on an unsuspecting 50 dollar junker. But hey, I live in the home state of Bubbas.

KR
 
M91-30PU002.gif

This one too:
(1946 M44 minus front sight forward with AK 74 7.62 brake, ATI stock Krylon Tan paint, Scout scope mount, NcStar 2-7x32mm IR scope, adjustable trigger. 3 MOA accurate with surplus ammo and a huge hit on the range due to the howitzer like muzzle blast!)
ScoutPaint007.gif
How is the scope and the mount holding on?

I want to scope my M44 for long range silliness.
 
Here is mine!

DSCF0026.jpg

This is a $15 gunsmith special that was left over for parts. Figured I couldn't hurt the value too much. Bad thing is that with the junk scope the rifle will shoot 2" groups at 100 yards. Go figure.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top