- Location
- East of Home, West of the Rest
The first 2 letters on mine are KB. It is a refurb laminate stock Tula.
It isn't the first two letters. It is about the single letter that follows the serial numbers.
The first 2 letters on mine are KB. It is a refurb laminate stock Tula.
The first 2 letters on mine are KB. It is a refurb laminate stock Tula.
Well that would explain why they stopped date stamping them.
Д = 1956г
И = 1957г
К = 1958г
Wonder if the 55/56 isn't 55 at all.
Glad to have cause a commotion in the forum and cause everyone to rethink the dating theories like the picture of a 1948 sks in an earlier thread. Some people just want to watch the world burn.
Agentcq; you present a compelling and classic argument. I will play devil's advocate and say that towards the end of SKS production (parts assembly), after the Soviets sold the Tula tooling to China, that they assembled SKS's from spare parts including parts made in late 1955.
The 'no date' non-letter series SKS's were likely made with parts made in very late 1955 or very early 1956. Some 1955 SKS's were dated, others were not... parts bins get mixed all the time. This was near the end of production and Tula was likely building a large inventory of parts.
I was a big skeptic at first, but I am slowly growing into a 1956-58 letter series believer. They were parts bin SKS's.
Just to respond to Jones above... I have access to a larger database of serial numbers than what's provided in my registry. All three letter series are more less equal in number/percentage, with K being slightly less.
From the full registry... Tula single Cyrillic character suffix FACTS that you can all debate until the cows come home:
Д 1955=14 1955/56=122
И 1955=2 1955/56=161
К 1955=0 1955/56=114
Note: some 1954 Izhevsk arsenal SKS's employ the aforementioned suffixes, as well as 14 other characters.
It is just that I have passed many I letter guns through my hands of late. Most heavily refurbed. I have talked to others with crates of them but, I have seen few, very few D and I have personally seen no K at all...
About the 55s. Refurbs? Receiver covers swapped? Left over 55 covers used?
It is just that I have passed many I letter guns through my hands of late. Most heavily refurbed. I have talked to others with crates of them but, I have seen few, very few D and I have personally seen no K at all...
It's just coincidence. According to the registry, it's fairly evenly split...
Д 1955=14 1955/56=122
И 1955=2 1955/56=161
К 1955=0 1955/56=114
I have 2 with the 56 mark on them, blank cover birch stock, Starting to warm up to this theory for sure. There are no refurb marks on the receiver/barrel or mag, not the stock either however there is a slight dip in the stock where it looks like they belt sanded the old serial # off and re stamped it. They are both black bayo's, people said before that the black bayo was refurb, not so sure,they are more slender and very smooth. I think they are parts bin assembly rifles and when it came to the stock, they grabbed the first one near them and stamped the serial #. The receiver/barrel, mag and bolt look new, unlike any of my other SKS, the bluing is phenominal, they are around 2000 apart in serial #! Refurb or not they are the best looking of my SKS!




























