1954 sks

I had a $20 Cabelas coupon, went to Cabelas and asked the guy at the gun counter if they had a nice SKS. He went to the back room and came out after 5 min with a very nice 1952 SKS, all matching number except the mag, no rust or dent. I grabbed it and paid 219.99+tax and joined the club.
 
Sounds like your Cabelas experience was much better then mine here in Saskatchewan. I went to the counter and said I'm looking to buy an sks, I wanted one year 52 or higher. He says to me he can only bring 2 out of the back. We cant just open up all of them. I said well I wanted to look at more then 2, I was hoping to fine a really nice one. The store wasn't even busy, so I thought this is my chance to really find a good one. If it was busy in the store I would totally understand not bringing out more then 2, but I ended up not getting one because the 2 he brought were both 1950's. On a positive note good to hear you made out good. Ill keep watching on EE
 
Sounds like your Cabelas experience was much better then mine here in Saskatchewan. I went to the counter and said I'm looking to buy an sks, I wanted one year 52 or higher. He says to me he can only bring 2 out of the back. We cant just open up all of them. I said well I wanted to look at more then 2, I was hoping to fine a really nice one. The store wasn't even busy, so I thought this is my chance to really find a good one. If it was busy in the store I would totally understand not bringing out more then 2, but I ended up not getting one because the 2 he brought were both 1950's. On a positive note good to hear you made out good. Ill keep watching on EE

Yeah, he was very nice, he explained why he picked that specific one like others had rust or didn't have tight fitting,...
 
Interesting. I have a laminated stock 1953 Tula with matching serial numbers, and the same serial is on the stock and not ###x'd out, so presumably not a force matched?

Not force matched because the laminate didn't previously have a serial # they put a new lam stock on during refurb likely because the original was beat to $#!t and they just stamped the serial # on it!
Some folks still call that forced matched as it is not the original stock!
 
Interesting. I have a laminated stock 1953 Tula with matching serial numbers, and the same serial is on the stock and not ###x'd out, so presumably not a force matched?

It's force matched after the fact if you will. Old wood stock swapped out for new laminate one and then number put on stock to match exsisting rifle.
Refurbed with new stock.
 
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