How Many Sks's Do You Own????????

I have one Chinese one made sometime in the 80's, and another minty Chinese one made in the 60's with a blade bayonet.
I haven't even tried the one from the 60's, and it won't see a single corrosive round when I do use it.

Zero.....waste of time, sold my 'D' model....lousy target gun...mini 14 with MOA of barn door is more accurate, a Win. 94 in 30-30 is a better back up deer gun and surplus ammo for it is not that cheap or plentiful these days

Or you could learn how to shoot a carbine, and get back to us with a more constructive post on this subject. :D
 
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2 , one is a refurbed Factory 26 and the other is a Norinco parts gun. Both shoot about the same ( 3 - 4" @ 100 yds) with Czech fodder.

The Norinco is my "experimental" SKS, I bought a receiver cover scope mount from Curtton, plopped a cheap Tasco reddot on it and am shooting only non- corrosive in it. I plan on reloading for 7.62X39 soon and will be casting bullets also. I bet I can get the accuracy to 2" at some point.

Craig
 
None. Open sighted rifles aren't my thang, and the SKS isn't accurate enough to warrant the time and expense of mounting a scope
 
Two modern Noricos.

"Bubba" here...

MooseHunt200701.jpg


and one brand new still in the cosmoline. Plus way too many accesories I can't all have on at once.
 
I was dumb enough to buy one, a chinese version so I could participate in a WWII re-enactor match. Ammo is cheap, and it was tested on the Eastern front in the fall of 1944 so it fills the bill. Accuracy is joke past 50 meters, especially after you start getting rapid barrel vibration from shooting rapid fire.
For real shooting with a WWII era I have the option of either a Lee Enfield #4 Mk 1 (T) (yes its matching) or an Springfield Armoury M1 Garand. I get a kick out of people trying to make a silk purse out of a sows ear!!

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Shot with FinePix E550 at 2007-12-23
 
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Thanks J I forgot about the infamous DILLIGAFF!
For those who need to know, the Dilligaff is an SKS I built a couple of years ago. I put a .30 cal barrel on it instead of a .311 so I can load .308 calibre bullets. I also removed the gas system there fore making it a straight pull bolt action and fitted a 10 round non detachable magazine to it. When I registered it over the phone I told the young fellow it was the "DILLIGAFF MK 1" when he asked me what DILLIGAFF meant I replied "Does it look like I give a flying @#$K", he laughed and asked what the MK II was gonna look like!

Scott
 
I was dumb enough to buy one, a chinese version so I could participate in a WWII re-enactor match. Ammo is cheap, and it was tested on the Eastern front in the fall of 1944 so it fills the bill. Accuracy is joke past 50 meters, especially after you start getting rapid barrel vibration from shooting rapid fire.
For real shooting with a WWII era I have the option of either a Lee Enfield #4 Mk 1 (T) (yes its matching) or an Springfield Armoury M1 Garand. I get a kick out of people trying to make a silk purse out of a sows ear!!

yawn. a) just FYI - Chinese version of SKS has participated in a different war - it was in Vietnam b) SKS was tested on a WESTERN front, as it was tested by the Soviet Army, not Germans c) I get a kick out of people who buy an SKS and expect it to be a match rifle.
 
1 x M59 (unissued & unfired)

2 x Chinese SKS (an older Norc, maybe military and a newer mix-master that I haven't shot yet).

My Norc is capable of decent groups with milsurp ammo, about 2-3" at 100m sitting with the fore-end resting on something, so it's quite probably a bit tighter than that.

Since I've purchased a CZ-858, there's a good chance that I'll eventually reload in 7.62x39 and really see how these rifles shoot.

Cheers,

Frank
 
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