1939 Tula 91/30 Range Report - Lots of Pictures!

ArtyMan

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Hey,

A while ago a posted results and some pictures of a shoot I did with my 1942 Izhevsk Mosin Nagant 91/30 repro PU sniper. I recieved a lot of positive feedback so I thought I would do another, this time with another rifle. The rifle I took with me today was my Finn capture matching 1939 Tula 91/30. The rifle is NOT a standard Soviet refurb, but has been re worked by the Finns at one point in time. The rifle is (as far as I can tell) all original, and the date/damage suggests a Winter/Continuation war capture.

Here are some pictures of the rifle.

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All Tula, right down to the bands

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Battle Damage? (Finn added shims)

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The rifle features the "SA" (Finn army) stamp, the D (D166 ammo) stamp, and the Finn "41" stamp. The "41" stamp meaning is a debate among collectors, however from what I have read many seem to think this is a year, meaning the year of capture/rework/reissue. Of course this is speculation.

More battle damage?
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Matching Reciever

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All in all a real piece of history! I have posted pictures on another forum and a few people seem to think the damage may have been caused by shrapnel. Of course there is no way to tell, but there is what looks like the same damage to the back of the reciever. and the right edge of the stock.

Down to the shooting!

Today I headed up to my local range where it was about -10 or so, about -15 or colder with the wind. The weather was great, clear and sunny all the way out, there was a slight wind however coming straight at the firing line.

I fired at both 50m and 100m with good results. Again keep in mind this is all iron sights and on a front rest.

Pictures of the range:

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Ammo:
The ammo I was using were custom reloads. I only had 180gr .311 Sierra bullets, so I loaded them into Prvi brass (third time fired), with Winchester primers and 46gr of Reloader 15. I found this combo to be very good for my 91/30's.

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The rifle shot VERY well and exceeded my expectations in all regards. My best group of the day measured a pretty decent 1.2 inches at 100m, and a little under that at 50m. The rifle has a VERY long and hard (haha) trigger, and a very rough bolt (what do you expect?!?!), but performed flawlessly, with no fail to feed/fail to fire/fail to eject etc... The rifle fired a little high, but thats my reloads (I typically use a different combo, but as such am out of those bullets!) Recoil was very manageable and shooting the rifle was a real pleasure. Overall my favourite 91/30 hands down!

The 100m Target.

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My SVT - just because!(range report to come later)

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Thanks for reading, any and all comments/feedback greatly appreciated!
 
Another excellent range report! That is a very nice Nagant youve got there. I sold my 1934 Mosin 91/30 hex reciever about 3 months ago and I regret it every day. Very nice rifles indeed.
 
Another excellent range report! That is a very nice Nagant youve got there. I sold my 1934 Mosin 91/30 hex reciever about 3 months ago and I regret it every day. Very nice rifles indeed.

Thanks! Yea the pre war Mosins sure are nice! especially the hex's. I was thinking of doing a series of these 'range reports' for my other milsurps as well. Would anyone be interested?
 
Very cool! She must have been captured during the Winter war and put to work with the Finns. I can't wait until I can take my M1891 out to the range in a month, reading this thread makes that moment want to come ever so faster.
 
Very cool! She must have been captured during the Winter war and put to work with the Finns. I can't wait until I can take my M1891 out to the range in a month, reading this thread makes that moment want to come ever so faster.

The M1891s are a real joy to shoot, they are usually very accurate and recoil is almost nothing. Make sure you take pictures and do a write up!
 
The M1891s are a real joy to shoot, they are usually very accurate and recoil is almost nothing. Make sure you take pictures and do a write up!

You betcha! I had some real fun cleaning her up and it is possibly the first time she has been fired in 60 or so years so I am quite excited.
 
I will be doing a range report with my rifles as well in the near future, I will be featuring a M-27 and M-39 Finn. I will also include my Martini-Enfield Artillery Carbine if there is a request.
 
Looks good Matt,

You seem to be able to put all your rounds exactly where you want them. No collection is complete without a few Mosins in there. M44, M38, 1891, 1891/30.....and then most of thoses with Nazi marking on them.....and then.....and then.....did I mention Mausers?....Lee Enfields?...it seems to be endless.

I'm looking forward to the next range report!
 
You'll have to be there for the next one! Next up is the 1891 I picked up off you, should be this Sunday if I can get outta bed :D
 
Very nice shooting! it's always an eye opening occasion for many people to see how those long "ugly tomato stakes" can shoot with proper training and good eyes.
I'll have to do myself a favor and begin tailoring loads for my Finns this year. I've been collecting for too long, now is fun time!
Please, take plenty pictures for your M-27 and M-30 sessions, this ought to be interesting.

BTW, your caliper looks strange; did you reassemble its slider in reverse?
PP.
 
good catch :p yea it broke a while ago and I threw it together for the picture as I couldnt find my tape measure or a ruler
 
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