Okay - I found this SKS at the Lloydminster Gun Show just a few weeks ago. What struck me is that it had two crylic letter prior to the serial number but no Tula/Izzy marking on the action cover. The rifle did come in a laminate stock - so maybe a 1955-58 rifle - but no Tula Star on the left of the receiver either...
When I picked it up it was drilled and tapped for a commercial mount - but $140 later and thanks to a friend and some elbow grease the rifle was mine and the four tapped holes were sealed/re-blued to match they rest of the rifle - I could have done a little better on the finishing but my first attempt.
I checked out Yoopers site and showed the rifle to Martin (Corwin Arms) at the show and he wondered if it was a Bulgarian SKS. The painted symbols on the stock are similar to an Egyptian SKS - but really the rifle doesn't follow one steady SKS rule.
The stock is laminate - so 1955 post production = Yes - but no markings on the stock but two stock repairs - drill rifle? Or heavy use?
For a 1955 post rifle - it doesn't have the Tula Star on the left of the receiver and no letter series after the serial number either???
No Chinese markings, only Crylic two letter prefix and regular 'lucky charm' mystery proof marks. But no Izzy or Tula stampings/proofs on any of the parts and the gas tube isn't electo-penciled either?
Only one star and it doesn't look like a Tula star under the wood - looks more like a 'lucky charm' marking.
There is the '2' on the right side of the receiver - what does it mean? And the front site has a proof mark but no 'accuracy rating: 1,2,3 - if that is what those actually mean'.
The rifle appears all matching - except the mag box - which one crylic letter out - and it looks like it was maybe re-matched at the arsenal level - but the font is the same.
Thoughts????
Pic Heavy:











When I picked it up it was drilled and tapped for a commercial mount - but $140 later and thanks to a friend and some elbow grease the rifle was mine and the four tapped holes were sealed/re-blued to match they rest of the rifle - I could have done a little better on the finishing but my first attempt.
I checked out Yoopers site and showed the rifle to Martin (Corwin Arms) at the show and he wondered if it was a Bulgarian SKS. The painted symbols on the stock are similar to an Egyptian SKS - but really the rifle doesn't follow one steady SKS rule.
The stock is laminate - so 1955 post production = Yes - but no markings on the stock but two stock repairs - drill rifle? Or heavy use?
For a 1955 post rifle - it doesn't have the Tula Star on the left of the receiver and no letter series after the serial number either???
No Chinese markings, only Crylic two letter prefix and regular 'lucky charm' mystery proof marks. But no Izzy or Tula stampings/proofs on any of the parts and the gas tube isn't electo-penciled either?
Only one star and it doesn't look like a Tula star under the wood - looks more like a 'lucky charm' marking.
There is the '2' on the right side of the receiver - what does it mean? And the front site has a proof mark but no 'accuracy rating: 1,2,3 - if that is what those actually mean'.
The rifle appears all matching - except the mag box - which one crylic letter out - and it looks like it was maybe re-matched at the arsenal level - but the font is the same.
Thoughts????
Pic Heavy:































































