You can see most of the joints in pics, there seems to be a mix of square and round, I spazz ordered and got number 20 haha
Hard to tell. A bit of a dice roll on some of them, while some are clearly post war refurbished. Tradex does not list the type of stock joint. But at this price and condition it's below current EE market price in either case.
Several of them I can see are lack of pine tar finish are definitely refurbished with post war stock.
Wiemajack just posted some lookers in the EE.
First off, the finish has been proven to not be pine tar. It's Kiväärintukkiöljy, a Finnish product that has no western equivalent.
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This finish was NOT put on at the factory. It was available to troops after the rifles were issued. Some rifles got coated, others not. But this is what is responsible for that lovely dark wartime stock with yellow flame licks throughout.
Rounded finger joint stocks are wartime. The pointed finger joints are either very late war or early post-war and the square joints are from well after the war. A wartime stock goes not mean a gun was not overhauled. Stocks were only replaced if they needed it, but a lack of dark finish does not, by itself, prove a gun was overhauled.
First off, the finish has been proven to not be pine tar. It's Kiväärintukkiöljy, a Finnish product that has no western equivalent.
![]()
![]()
This finish was NOT put on at the factory. It was available to troops after the rifles were issued. Some rifles got coated, others not. But this is what is responsible for that lovely dark wartime stock with yellow flame licks throughout.
Rounded finger joint stocks are wartime. The pointed finger joints are either very late war or early post-war and the square joints are from well after the war. A wartime stock goes not mean a gun was not overhauled. Stocks were only replaced if they needed it, but a lack of dark finish does not, by itself, prove a gun was overhauled.
I saw that. Oddly, he's really jacked the prices on some VKT guns with obviously sanded and re-worked SAKO cartouche stocks as though that should make the guns worth more, meanwhile there are a few with proper original depot-built 3 piece stocks that are appropriate for a non-refurb VKT, some with honest carry wear, that look original and un-refurbished, but those guns he has listed cheapest.
I suspect Jacques might not know the M39 collector market very well and places a premium on the Sako stock marking - whether valuable/collectible or not.
At at least $100 cheaper per rifle, the rifles on the Tradex site are still generally a better buy than these latest ones IMHO.
ThanksMost do not have that, but it's not the first time I've seen it. It could be that there was a flaw on one of the pieces of wood and they covered the knot or crack on both sides with these patches.
What is the general consensus on post war rifle stocks that have obviously seen use? How long did the Finns use M39's post war? I have seen M39's in post war stocks, with obvious signs of use and being issued, such as firing pin take down holes/marks in the hand guard grooves etc. This was not done by bubba as the rifles came from Finland that way.
What are your thoughts?