Description
This is the famous M91/30 Mosin Nagant used by Russia in WWII dated 1939. So basically pre WWII . Shoots 7.62x54r from the 29″ barrel. Selling at NR – No Reserve. Made at the Ishevsk factory.
I have not fired this one personally, they all go bang. Bore is very good, though a little dark which is normal. Wood does have a few dents and dings that you would expect in a mil-surp WWII rifle. See pics. The original serial number 4341 is on the bolt . magazine housing and receiver. I see no other marks. So this is an early one….
“History –
The Mosin-Nagant rifle fought the enemies of the Russian and Soviet Rodina from the 1890s until the early 1960s. The weapon’s history is a 70-year lesson in what life is like when you don’t get on well with your neighbors. The Russians used their Mosin-Nagants against the Japanese, the Germans, their fellow Russians, neighboring Finns and, finally, more Germans and more Japanese.
The Mosin-Nagant earns no great distinction in having been used and abused by millions of illiterate peasant soldiers and Soviet conscripts. It wasn’t the best all-around infantry rifle of its time. Truth to tell, the Mauser 98 and the Lee-Enfield would be superior SHTF rifles in almost every category—except reliability and price. Nothing holds a candle to the Mosin-Nagant when it comes to price and reliability.
It’s not just a beer-budget blunderbuss. During World War Two, the Mosin-Nagant was the weapon of choice (and necessity) of Soviet and Finnish snipers. These grim reapers of the eastern front used the Mosin-Nagant to single-handedly kill entire companies of enemy soldiers.
Sniper Vasiliy Zaytsev, fictionalized in “Enemy At The Gates,” used scoped Mosin-Nagants to snuff 242 Wehrmacht Soldaten in four months. His sniper girlfriend, Tania Chenaya, (who may or may not have looked anything like Rachel Weisz) gave at least 80 Germans a dirt nap with her own Mosin-Nagants. Lyudmilla Pavlichenko was even more effective: she and her Mosin-Nagants had 309 confirmed kills.
Even these Russian die-hards couldn’t keep up with Finnish sniper Simo “White Death” Hayha. He killed 505 Soviet soldiers in just 100 days during the Winter War of 1939-40, using only his Finnish-made Mosin and its iron sights. Gangsta!
It may be ugly and antiquated, but a Mosin-Nagant in the right hands (and a target-rich environment) is a nine-pound weapon of mass destruction.” End quote. Says it all…
We did shot a Mosin at my son-in-laws bachelor party. Yes is it Texas and he was a Marine….do the math. (Beer of course was later….just FYI) We shot a 3/8″ steel plate with a Mosin. Projectile went thru like hot butter with a nice crown affect. We stopped digging at 12″ in the ground as we never could find the bullet. It just kept going. So you wanna make a hole in anything short of a tank…..a Mosin-Nagant will do it….
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