I have a m44 with a Romanian shield and is import marked Hungary it is 1955 with 02 Hungarian bolt,maybe you can help me understand because # s match and bolt is EP, thanks Sam
@theleadlifereloading5742Күн бұрын
Awesome content
@wilkowilkins3632 күн бұрын
Ian McCallum said that the scope was wrong but the gun was right. I believe Gun Jesus
@archer7213 күн бұрын
Cool 😎👍
@archer7213 күн бұрын
At this point- buy any Finnish Mosin you can find and afford!… you can ALWAYS trade up.
@vernondodge16893 күн бұрын
Thanks Big Sam! 👍
@dsponsler3 күн бұрын
My mosin is hex, but made in 1943. All part numbers match. How’s that considered old during WWII?
@zaitcev04 күн бұрын
The narration comes very close to it, but does not quite spell it out: the key to reliable feeding is in the secondary magazine spring. Unfortunately, it's very difficult to source a good one. So the easy way to deal with it is to replace the whole bottom, as mentioned. But in the long term, this does not solve the problem of these springs sagging. I have a project on the back burner of annealing, bending, and tempering that spring. Unfortunately, it's dovetailed (unlike the primary spring, which is attached by a screw).
@pandoralechat7805 күн бұрын
Nice quick and easy technique! I'll try it! 👍👍
@pandoralechat7805 күн бұрын
Happy Independence Day to you and your family Sam!
@loganholt34236 күн бұрын
Incredible info as ever. I acquired a tula dated 1900 1891 mosin with the recoil lug and the older rear sight which they didn't update. First ever mosin
@rinatozaur6 күн бұрын
Thanks for page! Quite interesting keep going
@niclbicl6 күн бұрын
Hey Sam thanks for ur videos. I've been enjoying them for years now!
@randalldunkley10426 күн бұрын
Always interesting information that is often not thought about by the owners themselves. The sheer numbers of these rifles made does not detract from their popularity. I have two and they are my favorites to shoot out of my entire collection. I know that the bayonet has to be fitted to each rifle as they rarely fit right out of the box and that the rifle sights were made to be used with a fixed bayonet at all times.
@wagon90826 күн бұрын
Good video
@Oneofthetwelve7 күн бұрын
Looking forward to the videos 👍🏻
@KellEasy7 күн бұрын
Dude, that website is no joke! Easily one of the coolest online resources for anything milsurp related. Can't wait to see what gets added!
@A2Moonclaw7 күн бұрын
I want to see your most american mosin
@garywatkins55337 күн бұрын
Thanks for a great video buddy
@ol1guy9947 күн бұрын
Happy Independence Day
@mikepeterson93627 күн бұрын
Happy ID4 Sam, and thanks for doing what you do -- always appreciate your channel.
@creedleader55837 күн бұрын
I was confused by the swiss part for a sec. After some googling I found out that SIG made barrels for M91 Mosins, just when I thought I knew everything about my favorite garbage rods
@salvadorrodriguez60467 күн бұрын
Hey Sam is there such a term of unissued I have a 42 Izzy all matching # and no refurb markings
@christophergoodwin-qo7tg8 күн бұрын
The older (imperial 3 line rifles) like the one in the video, had much smoother actions then ww1 and ww2 production mosin nagants,
@abones9008 күн бұрын
AAC will be selling 5.45mm soon.
@tacocat60359 күн бұрын
I thought those stands were drum mags
@lalthamuon67209 күн бұрын
Is that a ramrod ?
@Untouchable13459 күн бұрын
Chinese mosins are not of lower quality they are even betyer than finnish mosin One guy named zhang taofang killed 300 american troops in less than 2 weeks using this beauty and only usimg his iron sights
@DavidSaintOnge20079 күн бұрын
ah nostalgia... armory punishment. the hours I've spent brushing barrels of old crew-served weapons to remove the rust.
@robertdalhart78279 күн бұрын
Can't be that quick if it takes a 5 minute video to show it!
@dicklarge19019 күн бұрын
Big Sam have you ever looked at the Boyd rifle stocks for the mosin nagant. The thumb hole and the spike camp stocks look sweet.
@Trains-stuff10 күн бұрын
That is very cool
@abones90010 күн бұрын
I wish I would have found this before I bought and installed the DelTac scope mount which has three drill/tap points on the receiver.
@A2Moonclaw10 күн бұрын
Enlisted theme song lets go!
@ianklems594910 күн бұрын
Im looking into it more but supposedly my buddys finnish mosin is a 1891 dated tang with one of those front sling swivel bands. its got a finnish stock though so the sling is through the swivel the finns added.
@AthensArmory30310 күн бұрын
Great video, I have one of those sights in my collection. I always wondered about the mark, so I kept it aside.
@jerrylaroy241310 күн бұрын
I have an almost identical rifle from Finland. It was rebarreled in 1921 to dragoon length and has the same rear sight spring and KAB stamping on the rear sight. The only difference is that the font is larger and the stamping is parellel to the long axsis of the sight.
@gregskaggs852111 күн бұрын
Very interesting thank you
@jakeschantz908111 күн бұрын
Awesome rifle and pokemon shirt!
@dakotaweeks744211 күн бұрын
You never cease to amaze me please do a follow up video
@dondavis699711 күн бұрын
One hundred dollars try fifty nine dollars and two boxes of shells With it
@madaboutmilitaria363011 күн бұрын
Very interesting
@kaz570711 күн бұрын
Could the difference in sight size be due to geometry between the front and rear sight? If a barrel is longer the front sight will appear higher than the front sight on a shorter barrel at the same angle.
@mikepeterson936212 күн бұрын
I can confirm that the same 7.62x54r round out of an M91 does indeed exit the muzzle slower than a 91/30 with virtually all modern/semi-modern ammunition (back to the 1930s at least). You get about 40-50 more fps out of the 91/30. That still leaves a big gap in the historical record though, as the most interesting and experimental stuff going on was right after smokeless power was starting to get adopted and used. So anything WWI or earlier could include quite a few developments on powders, and the site calibrations that were needed to deal with them. But it does make sense that the Russians decided the M91 was needlessly long.
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I have a m44 with a Romanian shield and is import marked Hungary it is 1955 with 02 Hungarian bolt,maybe you can help me understand because # s match and bolt is EP, thanks Sam
Awesome content
Ian McCallum said that the scope was wrong but the gun was right. I believe Gun Jesus
Cool 😎👍
At this point- buy any Finnish Mosin you can find and afford!… you can ALWAYS trade up.
Thanks Big Sam! 👍
My mosin is hex, but made in 1943. All part numbers match. How’s that considered old during WWII?
The narration comes very close to it, but does not quite spell it out: the key to reliable feeding is in the secondary magazine spring. Unfortunately, it's very difficult to source a good one. So the easy way to deal with it is to replace the whole bottom, as mentioned. But in the long term, this does not solve the problem of these springs sagging. I have a project on the back burner of annealing, bending, and tempering that spring. Unfortunately, it's dovetailed (unlike the primary spring, which is attached by a screw).
Nice quick and easy technique! I'll try it! 👍👍
Happy Independence Day to you and your family Sam!
Incredible info as ever. I acquired a tula dated 1900 1891 mosin with the recoil lug and the older rear sight which they didn't update. First ever mosin
Thanks for page! Quite interesting keep going
Hey Sam thanks for ur videos. I've been enjoying them for years now!
Always interesting information that is often not thought about by the owners themselves. The sheer numbers of these rifles made does not detract from their popularity. I have two and they are my favorites to shoot out of my entire collection. I know that the bayonet has to be fitted to each rifle as they rarely fit right out of the box and that the rifle sights were made to be used with a fixed bayonet at all times.
Good video
Looking forward to the videos 👍🏻
Dude, that website is no joke! Easily one of the coolest online resources for anything milsurp related. Can't wait to see what gets added!
I want to see your most american mosin
Thanks for a great video buddy
Happy Independence Day
Happy ID4 Sam, and thanks for doing what you do -- always appreciate your channel.
I was confused by the swiss part for a sec. After some googling I found out that SIG made barrels for M91 Mosins, just when I thought I knew everything about my favorite garbage rods
Hey Sam is there such a term of unissued I have a 42 Izzy all matching # and no refurb markings
The older (imperial 3 line rifles) like the one in the video, had much smoother actions then ww1 and ww2 production mosin nagants,
AAC will be selling 5.45mm soon.
I thought those stands were drum mags
Is that a ramrod ?
Chinese mosins are not of lower quality they are even betyer than finnish mosin One guy named zhang taofang killed 300 american troops in less than 2 weeks using this beauty and only usimg his iron sights
ah nostalgia... armory punishment. the hours I've spent brushing barrels of old crew-served weapons to remove the rust.
Can't be that quick if it takes a 5 minute video to show it!
Big Sam have you ever looked at the Boyd rifle stocks for the mosin nagant. The thumb hole and the spike camp stocks look sweet.
That is very cool
I wish I would have found this before I bought and installed the DelTac scope mount which has three drill/tap points on the receiver.
Enlisted theme song lets go!
Im looking into it more but supposedly my buddys finnish mosin is a 1891 dated tang with one of those front sling swivel bands. its got a finnish stock though so the sling is through the swivel the finns added.
Great video, I have one of those sights in my collection. I always wondered about the mark, so I kept it aside.
I have an almost identical rifle from Finland. It was rebarreled in 1921 to dragoon length and has the same rear sight spring and KAB stamping on the rear sight. The only difference is that the font is larger and the stamping is parellel to the long axsis of the sight.
Very interesting thank you
Awesome rifle and pokemon shirt!
You never cease to amaze me please do a follow up video
One hundred dollars try fifty nine dollars and two boxes of shells With it
Very interesting
Could the difference in sight size be due to geometry between the front and rear sight? If a barrel is longer the front sight will appear higher than the front sight on a shorter barrel at the same angle.
I can confirm that the same 7.62x54r round out of an M91 does indeed exit the muzzle slower than a 91/30 with virtually all modern/semi-modern ammunition (back to the 1930s at least). You get about 40-50 more fps out of the 91/30. That still leaves a big gap in the historical record though, as the most interesting and experimental stuff going on was right after smokeless power was starting to get adopted and used. So anything WWI or earlier could include quite a few developments on powders, and the site calibrations that were needed to deal with them. But it does make sense that the Russians decided the M91 was needlessly long.
Big Sam is the man.