Left Hand SKS, for a friend who got a stroke **UPDATE, SWIVEL SUPPORT READY**

louthepou

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Hi folks,

Well, a friend of mine had a stroke in September 2013. In his 40's, three girls and a wife... it's been rough, and he sure isn't in shape as he used to be, but he worked really hard and now is back home, and able to take care of himself for the basic things. But, his right side is semi paralyzed... weak muscle strength, and limited fine motor skills. His left side works fine - he'll become a left-handed person, no choice. I told him that I've been left-handed for more than 40 years and I'm doing ok :)

I sold his Remington 700 rifle, and we got working on something which he could use to shoot. We figured that the rifle should have a pistol grip, which allows him to get good control with his left hand. Semi-auto, so he doesn't have to work a bolt repeatedly. Problem is, a semi-auto left-hand rifle isn't common. I was initially thinking of a Remington 740, I know there are some with the cocking handle on the left side, but, well, these aren't found everywhere all the time. Still could get to that one someday, and add a thumbhole stock from Boyds. But this one was going to be a build on a tight budget so...

Here comes the SKS.

The donor rifle was your average Chinese SKS, whith a bonus Choate mount. Great, I needed one for this build anyways.

I got a Tapco stock for the pistol grip. My friend initially tried the feel of this stock on my son's Ruger 10/22 and it seemed to suit, so we went for it.

Second, I worked on the scope mount. Easy enough to level the mount with the receiver, a few hours in the shop drilling and tapping; step 1 completed.



Second, I needed to modify the safety lever, because with one hand on the pistol grip and the other hand not worth much, the safety would have to be operated with the index. For this delicate welding, I didn't trust my beginner's skills, so I went to my local welder who has seen everything and done everything. He welded a curved section of steel, then I spent a couple of hours carefully grinding the part into shape; testing it on, removing it, a bit more grinding, repeat cycle many times...




Step 2 completed, let's move to step 3: the bolt carrier.

I used a fine cut-off disk, removed the cocking handle, and went to my welder's shop again. Back at home, there was a lot of grinding and sanding and polishing involved. The end result isn't perfect, but it'll work! I blued the part, figuring that it may somewhat hide from you a bit of the aesthetic imperfection...



Step 3 completed. I had to grind a bit off the rear cover so that the cocking handle wouldn't bang on it (we'll call this one step 3 1/2):



Well, there it is, I just have to put a scope on it, and we'll be testing this one out at the range. If the results are satisfactory, we'll see if theres something useful which could be attached to the forend - forward grip, or a brace of sorts; that'll be the fine tuning, if my friend likes the overall feel. I'm waiting for a buttstock with cheek riser, but other than that, it's pretty much done.

A few more pics:



 
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Very inspiring, it looks excellent. You did a phenominal job, the attention to detail and thought that went into it is very evident in the pictures. I'm sure your friend will love that rifle.

A some what related endeavor although no where near the work.

My father lost 3 fingers on his right hand during his time in the army (mortar incident). He did 8 more years with the Patricias before moving on to the air force, overcoming the difficulties associated with the injury. But as he's aged his hand has given him greif with arthritis. I developed pistol drills for him based on the limitations of his hand, as he found pistol shooting cumbersome and difficult. I don't live in the same province as him so I haven't yet seen how it's worked for him. But I have high hopes.
 
I have another suggestion for you as well. I'm a lefty and I love my JR Carbine. I've got the bolt handle on the right and it ejects left. You could however easily move the charging handle to the left while still ejecting left. Put an ambi safety on it (thumb down to fire, trigger finger to pull for safe) and it's a lefty's dream.

There are two Allen screws which move the ejector from the left side to the right side. Pop the pin out of the bolt (carefully) and move the extractor from the right side to the left side, re-insert the pin. Easy as pie.

It's a non-restricted 9mm gopher exploder.

:)

:ar15:
 
Nice job on the conversion.

If your buddy wants another rifle that's somewhat left hand freindly, I believe the Czech VZ 52/57 ejects forward and to the left about 10 or 11 O'clock. Might be worth looking into...
 
Thanks guys, much appreciated. Hope it'll work fine at the range!

Nice job on the conversion.

If your buddy wants another rifle that's somewhat left hand freindly, I believe the Czech VZ 52/57 ejects forward and to the left about 10 or 11 O'clock. Might be worth looking into...

Thanks jakester I hadn't thought about the VZ, not a bad idea!
 
another option could be Cx4 Storm, 9mm version should be especially forgiving for unnatural lefty.
100% ambidextrous
light
10 rounds magazines
 
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