Bead blasted bayonet= REFURB...if it was unrefurbed, the bayo would be as shiny as the bolt assembly. ( I have one, and they are hard to find)
Are you sure? I will be mighty pissed if I paid a premium for a refurb. Perhaps some of the old veterans can chime in on this one. I won't say you're wrong, but I won't trust one opinion. EVERY
'54 I've seen, and I've seen many, have a dull/matte silver finish on them. I thought (and I am always open to other viewpoints) is that by '54 the Russians had made a number of small changes/improvements, including coating the bayonets, probably to help control corrosion.
My opinion is that the early bayonets, like on my '51, were polished steel, and later a dull coating of some sort was applied. In some cases the bayonets yellowed over time, perhaps due to the effects of cosmoline. I also don't believe the Russians were 100% consistent in their processes, and perhaps a few were polished and the remainder were coated in '54 (and in other years?). One thing I have learned in owning numerous refurbs (most sold), and now two non-refurbs is that there are slight variations in the SKS for any given year. For example, I have a "rare" '52 with a bayonet lug that is of a "transitional" nature, as it has both the recess features of later SKS's, but has a straight cut (not angled) inner ear of pre-1952 examples. Some SKS's have double wound operating rod springs, some have standard operating rod springs, etc.
This '54 has no refurb marks of any sort, the wood is definitely original. The cartouches are sharp, and dare I say sloppy. The metal finish is definitely original. All metal parts are matching. The screw that holds the bayonet in place shows no signs that it saw a screwdriver since the factory, the dimples that help to hold the bayonet screw in place are
perfectly aligned. The matte coating on the bayonet also looks aged, with a very slight hue of yellow (probably cosmoline).
In summary, I highly doubt this SKS went through any sort of refurbishment process, and I hightly doubt the bayonet was replaced or the original purposely bead blasted and coated, with the screw put back into perfect alignment with the punch dimples without any evidence of marring, etc. And I have never seen an all-matching "refurb" with the original wood but with a replacment bayonet.
I will await the opinions of individuals like curtton, woodbeef, weimajack, and other experienced collectors and/or sellers that have handled hundreds, if not thousands of SKS's.