What's the best ammo or bullet/load for the M39?
This will be my first M39.
And the 27's are supposed to also be .308 never owned one to be 100 % on that ........Harold
M39's are not .308". They are usually .310" to .311". Only the 28 series rifles are typically .308".
Finn m39s are calibrated for the 185gn D166 bullet. MFS makes a current copy of the D166.
In reloads, I used 174 0.311 SMKs over ~41 gr of IMR4064 or 4895. Varget also works well. This load will not be the limiting factor in accuracy. Velocity will be around 2200 fps and will be correct to 'historical' specifications- so your sight ladder will be correct.
M39's are not .308". They are usually .310" to .311". Only the 28 series rifles are typically .308".
Finn m39s are calibrated for the 185gn D166 bullet. MFS makes a current copy of the D166.
Years ago when I went through the "M39" craze (back when prices were sane btw- this latest round of prices is ridiculous- enjoy) I found that the 39 is not picky. An important thing is to use .310/.311 diameter projectiles, otherwise with .308 projectiles you will wear your bore into a sewer pipe in short order due to plasma (hot gas) blow-by. The Finns figured that out back in the 1930's.
The nice thing about the 39 is that it was produced when raw materials were at a critically low level, and hence the bore was sized to accept battlefield captured Russian ammunition. It handles all surplus with ease and accuracy. If you don't have proper .310 projectiles, just shoot surplus and clean with bore with hot water (only water dissolves salts- ammonia solutions are thought to clean, but it's not the ammonia that does the cleaning, it's the water that is the other half of the solution that best dissolves the salts) at the end of the day, follow with oil or kroil and you're good to go. Don't over think it too much. The Finns didn't.
I found Czech silvertip to be very accurate, as well as MFS surplus in both 185 and 203 grains. 203 was actually more accurate than 185 on the average. Nothing beat 7N1 though- that stuff was wild in the couple of 39's I put it through.
In reloads, I used 174 0.311 SMKs over ~41 gr of IMR4064 or 4895. Varget also works well. This load will not be the limiting factor in accuracy. Velocity will be around 2200 fps and will be correct to 'historical' specifications- so your sight ladder will be correct.
Last tip: for the money that these things are going for right now, go buy a Tikka, any Tikka (or Sako), and enjoy having a rifle that is the pinnacle of 90 years of Mosin-based engineering beginning with the M27 series, some of which were rebuilt at a small machine shop in Tikkakoski, Finland. If you're an exceptionally astute collector, you may find a matching sewing machine to compliment your rifle. When the craze finally subsides, you'll be able to find or import examples for much more reasonable rates. This current round is fair market for fools.
During WWII, according to D. Bowser, there was an "S" bullet that had a flat base and was 170 grains in weight.
There was the D46 and the D166 too. D46 had a sepped boat tail 170-gr. at 2528fps. D166 had a .310" step boat-tail of 200 grains at 2297fps.
D. Bowser, _Rifles of the White Death_ (1998), 100-1:
Finnish ammo:
Ball=plain
Tracer= white tip
Armor piercing= Blue
API= black tip/ red ring
Expl./I= Red
Low pressure= round nose w/cannelure
Blank= crimped
Blank= wood bullet, blue or red
Dummy= chromed/ grooved
Soviet:
Ball [147gr]= plain
Hvy. ball [182gr.]= yellow
LB/Steel= silver
Tracer= green
AP = Black
API= Black w/ red band, or red bullet, or black bullet
Sub-sonic= green bullet, case mouth and case head
AP before 1930= copper cap
etc. etc.
Another source, Smith and Smith, _The Book of Rifles_ [NY: Castle Books, 1973], 176:
Finnish ammo: 148.28gr. ball at 2789fps.
177.45gr. ammo at 2428fps.
185.16gr. ammo at 2411fps
D166: 200.59gr. bullet at 2297fps.
Excellent! I'll source some Lapua D166 bullets.Now that I'm not on my phone, some better ammo info, ruthlessly stolen from 7.62x54r.com:
So the bottom line is the Finns had access to captured Russian ammo, both light and heavy ball, as well as several versions of domestic Finnish ammo. Some variants could only be used in certain guns (i.e. if you did not have a D marked chamber on an older model like an M24 or M27, you could not safely shoot D166 or Heavy Ball), but an M39 can shoot all of these rounds. The rear sight is calibrated for the Lapua D166 bullet, but I suspect there is not a big POI difference between it and the Soviet Heavy Ball at 100m.
Excellent! I'll source some Lapua D166 bullets.
Been looking for a nice M39 for a long time. I expect there won't be anymore, so naturally I jumped on this batch from TradeEx.
Paid over $1000 to the door and I've paid more for a modern hunting rifle, shotgun or handgun.
The rifle didn't disappoint. There might be millions of Mosins out there, but not Finnish Mosins.
Hence the collector and price values.