Smith and Wesson 38-44 Heavy Duty, Nickle with Factory Stags. 1952 or so, 12 shots ever fired from it. Was my dad's bootlegging companion.
Smith and Wesson 38-44 Heavy Duty, Nickle with Factory Stags. 1952 or so, 12 shots ever fired from it. Was my dad's bootlegging companion.
Wow. Haven't poked through the whole thread, yet, but some mighty nice pieces represented here.
My humble contributions - pictures taken for other sites so I haven't put together a nice setting for them:
Marlin 1894 chambered in 44 Magnum. More or less classic style and action with a nice modern cartridge, though I do wish Marlin was still making them with the classic slim forearm. 44 mag in a carbine is really sweet. The rail I added... is out of place and I might not do it again if I had it to do over, but it was the most inexpensive way to get the peep sight (and a darned good one, at that) and the possibility of mounting a scope for pig hunting. Fun gun to shoot.
A Spanish CETME .308 in classic wood furniture. The first production rifle from German engineering after WWII (from a German expat who found work in France and Spain) and the direct descendant of Germany's ground breaking Stg 44 - the world's first "assault rifle" as it has come to be called. The history of it is fascinating and it is practical for me: I almost exclusively cast and reload my own ammunition and the CETME uses a roller delayed blowback system instead of a gas system. It is the same design that H&K licensed from CETME that the world now knows as the G3 and HK91. Also a fun gun, but then I've never met a boring one.
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CLShaeffer, nice CETME ya got there. 30 years ago as a young and impressionable Jarhead I was stationed in Spain. We would qualify and fam/fire our weapons with Spanish Marines and on a couple of occasions I got to fire the CETME. Nice weapon and I preferred 7.62 Nato to 5.56mm. I can't complain about the M16A1 I was issued as it was accurate and always reliable. I was chagrined to learn that just prior to my arrival my unit had packed up M14 rifles in order to issue M16s. Oh well.
Very nice indeed. I need one for my collection.
I just snagged another today, (my fourth) on sale again so I couldn't resist.
Got a nice 1930 Tula this time in excellent condition. I've had great luck at this store, having purchased sight unseen, a 1931, 1935, and now a 1930 all from Tula, and a somewhat roughly machined but still very nice 1942 round receiver model by Izhevsk.
All were imported by Century Arms, a company I can highly recommend.
~ Quantum mechanics: The dreams stuff is made of. ~
Aim Surplus has some Mosin Nagant sniper rifles for sale right now. I don't own one so I can't tell you much about them but I have bought some other stuff from Aim and the transaction went well.
Mike
Coño, un "chopo"!
A long, long time ago I wrote something about mine: CETME: In Memoriam, CETME for Dummies - Field Stripping the CETME C, CETME for Dummies - Field Assembling the CETME C
It seems it was just yesterday...
Credidi me pulcrum felem vidisse...
http://img338.imageshack.us/img338/9912/gtsig.jpg
“Nowhere in the world will such a brotherly feeling of confidence be experienced as amongst those who sit together smoking their pipes.”
I just had the Mosin sniper at our club's CMP Vintage Sniper Rifle match today, and my partner and I were out-shot by some (but not all) of other teams using M1903A4s and the sole Enfield No.4 Mk1 (T). We did, however post the best score of those shooting Mosin Sniper rifles. We were using PPU Match ammo, which this rifle really seems to like better than the standard military surplus ball ammo.
\l/
( oo )
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Kilroy was here
Member of the Vintage Camera Club
Awesome. The only one I'd probably want MORE than a Mosin sniper would be an Enfield No.4Mk1 (T). SO awesome.
One of the best sniper rifles ever made in that era was the Enfield P14 sniper. That rifle is accurate as hell. I have an infantry version and it's still a tack driver despite being almost a hundred years old.
http://img338.imageshack.us/img338/9912/gtsig.jpg
“Nowhere in the world will such a brotherly feeling of confidence be experienced as amongst those who sit together smoking their pipes.”