Anyway, just my 2 cents (which now cost 3.8 cents to make).
Some of the other fellows will be on shortly, so see what they think, too.
That's the beauty of the Internet: there is room for all kinds of opinions...... even mine!
Important Rule: DO have fun!
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I note that this is your first post. WELCOME ABOARD!!!!!
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I think that a SKS rifle, being currently so cheap, and ammo as well, is an unavoidable addition to anyone's gun locker. It's a great first center-fire rifle, super fun for plinking and reliable. Accurate? Short range, good enough.
Louthepou is right! The Russian sks's we are seeing here now are a deal!
If money is no concern, get both!
Cheers
Jay
As Lou says, an SKS is just about mandatory..... and they ARE fun. They just aren't a long-range rifle with which you can do precision shooting....... but that's not what they were designed for, anyway! Russian ones are still cheap and still good. You can thank Comrade Stalin that there are so many of them available.
Hope this helps.
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The REAL problem is that semi-autos like to change their points of impact according to the magazine. With a 5-round magazine, the rifle will put its first shot in one place, then a nice 3-round group, then the 5th shot opposite side of the target from the first. Repeated testing with an M-1 Garand (father of the M-14) showed Number 1 high and left, followed by 6 in a nice group, followed by Number 8 low and right. With a 5-round mag capacity, you get only 3 rounds off that you can really count on. I gave up shooting semi-autos almost entirely for this reason when our 20-round magazines were banned by the Government that promised not to interfere with sports shooting.
Just keep the bolt clean after each range session and you won't have any problem with that. Never had an SKS slamfire yet after several cases and several SKS's.About the SKS... be aware that there is a known issue with the free floating firing pin. Since there's no spring to return the firing pin, commercial primers, or improper cleaning, can lead to it sticking, resulting in something known as 'slamfire'. When the firing pin sticks after a round is fired, a new round is chambered and fired immediately, and so on. Basically the rifle goes accidental full auto. There are aftermarket replacment firing pin/spring combinations that can prevent the issue.
You need to pickup the M14 book and see when the USA sold their H&R M14 machinary to the Chinese during the Vietnam war era. The Chinese have been building and improving them since. I consider that some history.For me, it's the history behind the weapon, and the Norinco had none of that.
...The M-14 is the shooting equivalent of a 1970's American muscle car; big, loud, powerful, may not handle well on corners but when you put the hammer down on the straightaways, boy does it go...
I have both; a couple of Norc M-14's and a Norc SKS.
The M-14 is the shooting equivalent of a 1970's American muscle car; big, loud, powerful, may not handle well on corners but when you put the hammer down on the straightaways, boy does it go. There's a huge M-14 community in Canada. If you check out the Main Battle Rifles forum, there's all sorts of info, and Hungry runs M-14 clinics all over Canada where you can learn to tweak and tune and accurize and shoot them. These are sort of like quilting bees for men and are hugely worthwhile and an excellent time. Last weekend's clinic, at CFB Petawawa, involved learning how to shoot it at out to 500 yards, with irons.
The SKS is the shooting equivalent of the Lada Cossack: small underpowered and ugly, but extremely affordable, and indestructible. If you have to buy one, go with a Russian one; they're more interesting, historically speaking, and better finished. SKSes are hugely popular in Canada due to price, ammo cost, and availability.
You should also give the CZ858 a look: if it were a car, it'd be a Czech-made European roadster; sleek, sporty, and an utter blast to drive. It's more expensive than either the -14 or the SKS, but comes with four mags, and shoots the same round as the SKS, so it's as affordable to shoot, and in the long term ammo cost, not firearm cost, is going to be your major expense. It's also better made, more accurate, and easier to strip than the SKS, and it looks considerably more evil (most non-gunnies can't tell it from an AK47) and makes Wendy Cukier wet her panties in uncontrollable fits of hysterical outraged moral cowardice.
My SKS basically sits in the back of my gunsafe, unloved and unfired, since I got my 858. I keep on thinking I should sell it, but it wouldn't bring enough to really justify the hassle. If you're interested, though, PM me; it comes with a PLA jungle stock, PLA webbing, and a scout scope mount.
You need to pickup the M14 book and see when the USA sold their H&R M14 machinary to the Chinese during the Vietnam war era. The Chinese have been building and improving them since. I consider that some history.
Now they make an M16 M4 that's very reliable. It's still ongoing history.
Yes, I own a nice Russian SKS unfired since refurb too.



























