Pretty simple rules:
1) Soviet Mosins only. Original and Refurb guns are OK. Capture marked rifles are OK is not rebuilt outside the Soviet Union. Original imperial eosins are also fair ball.
2) No Finnish rebuilt Mosins.
3) No Spanish Civil War rebuilds
4) No Romanian, Chinese, Polish or Hungarian Mosins
So basically Soviet guns and Imperial guns inherited by the Soviets only please
This is just to set bounds around the thread.
Here are the ones I currently have to kick things off:
Top to bottom:
1) 1943 M38 Izhevsk in M38 stock
2) 1943 M38 Izhevsk in M44 stock
3) 1942 Izhevsk M91/30
4) 1932 Tula M91/30 (does not appear to be an ex-dragoon. Likely a very early 91/30 from it's birth)
5) 1943 Tula M91/30 PU sniper (very early Molot import with the moot marking under the handguard)
And because I had the photo, here are all the different types of Soviet Mosin oil bottles I have. I've got lots of others (Romanian, Chinese, Finnish, etc.) but here are the Russian ones:
Left to Right:
1) single chamber Izhevsk
2) single chamber not maker marked
3) post-war double chamber round oiler (I have probably 6 or 7 of these - they are the most common variety)
4) wartime double chamber oiler
Of the major variants, I'm really only missing the single compartment version that has no embossed circle on it and an example of the imperial oil bottle.
1) Soviet Mosins only. Original and Refurb guns are OK. Capture marked rifles are OK is not rebuilt outside the Soviet Union. Original imperial eosins are also fair ball.
2) No Finnish rebuilt Mosins.
3) No Spanish Civil War rebuilds
4) No Romanian, Chinese, Polish or Hungarian Mosins
So basically Soviet guns and Imperial guns inherited by the Soviets only please
Here are the ones I currently have to kick things off:

Top to bottom:
1) 1943 M38 Izhevsk in M38 stock
2) 1943 M38 Izhevsk in M44 stock
3) 1942 Izhevsk M91/30
4) 1932 Tula M91/30 (does not appear to be an ex-dragoon. Likely a very early 91/30 from it's birth)
5) 1943 Tula M91/30 PU sniper (very early Molot import with the moot marking under the handguard)
And because I had the photo, here are all the different types of Soviet Mosin oil bottles I have. I've got lots of others (Romanian, Chinese, Finnish, etc.) but here are the Russian ones:

Left to Right:
1) single chamber Izhevsk
2) single chamber not maker marked
3) post-war double chamber round oiler (I have probably 6 or 7 of these - they are the most common variety)
4) wartime double chamber oiler
Of the major variants, I'm really only missing the single compartment version that has no embossed circle on it and an example of the imperial oil bottle.