I am soon going to be purchasing my "first" firearm. Done enough shooting to know I want a Mosin to be in my safe first. For the $200 or so I will spend on one, I don't see how it is a bad investment. Was considering an SKS as my first, but with the Mosin I could afford that AND pickup a nice single shot .22 or 12 gauge for small game if I want.
As such I have been devouring as much information about the Mosin Nagant as possible. How to pick one out, how to clean them, how they perform ect. However one thing that keeps getting thrown out is the whole "peasant rifle for farmers" thing. Getting massive groupings, bad craftsmanship/tolerances ect. I get it is a 100 year old battle rifle designed to be tough and cheap.
I don't expect sub MOA accuracy out of a Mosin. But from what I have been reading/watching I have come to a few conclusions and I wanted to know if I was correct.
Replacing the wooden stock with something like an ATI monte Carlo not only makes the rifle handle better/more comfortable to shoot, glass/pillar bedding can greatly increase accuracy with a free float barrel.
The stock trigger is heavy and creepy thanks to its simple design. Watching videos on the internet, you can take a stock mosin trigger and replace it with a great aftermarket, or put in the work to true the contact points, polish them to make everything smoother, adjust the trigger to have less travel ect to greatly improve the rifle.
The Mosin came with a steel cleaning rod, made of the same material as the barrel. That coupled with lax manufacturing standards leave the crown of the barrel in rough shape. I have seen videos of guys cutting, crowning and lapping these barrels down to make them work better.
Of course I know about the variety of scope mounts that remove the ability to use stripper clips but thats not a concern if the rifle shoots better and you can see what you are shooting.
If I was to hand pick the best mosin from my local Canadian tire, do all this work to it would I be able to take a 100 year old battle rifle and make it shoot decently? As I see it, for about 300$ plus the cost of the rifle itself, I could have a good shooter. Maybe not a 1000 yard precision rifle, but something that I could use at the 100m/300m range near by with respectable results. Before anybody jumps me for destroying a mosin or recommends I just buy a Ruger American or whatever, no. Thats not what I want to do. I want to know specifically if putting time and effort into a Mosin will result in a decent shooter, damn to cost, labor and heartache that it will never perform like a $1200 rifle.
As such I have been devouring as much information about the Mosin Nagant as possible. How to pick one out, how to clean them, how they perform ect. However one thing that keeps getting thrown out is the whole "peasant rifle for farmers" thing. Getting massive groupings, bad craftsmanship/tolerances ect. I get it is a 100 year old battle rifle designed to be tough and cheap.
I don't expect sub MOA accuracy out of a Mosin. But from what I have been reading/watching I have come to a few conclusions and I wanted to know if I was correct.
Replacing the wooden stock with something like an ATI monte Carlo not only makes the rifle handle better/more comfortable to shoot, glass/pillar bedding can greatly increase accuracy with a free float barrel.
The stock trigger is heavy and creepy thanks to its simple design. Watching videos on the internet, you can take a stock mosin trigger and replace it with a great aftermarket, or put in the work to true the contact points, polish them to make everything smoother, adjust the trigger to have less travel ect to greatly improve the rifle.
The Mosin came with a steel cleaning rod, made of the same material as the barrel. That coupled with lax manufacturing standards leave the crown of the barrel in rough shape. I have seen videos of guys cutting, crowning and lapping these barrels down to make them work better.
Of course I know about the variety of scope mounts that remove the ability to use stripper clips but thats not a concern if the rifle shoots better and you can see what you are shooting.
If I was to hand pick the best mosin from my local Canadian tire, do all this work to it would I be able to take a 100 year old battle rifle and make it shoot decently? As I see it, for about 300$ plus the cost of the rifle itself, I could have a good shooter. Maybe not a 1000 yard precision rifle, but something that I could use at the 100m/300m range near by with respectable results. Before anybody jumps me for destroying a mosin or recommends I just buy a Ruger American or whatever, no. Thats not what I want to do. I want to know specifically if putting time and effort into a Mosin will result in a decent shooter, damn to cost, labor and heartache that it will never perform like a $1200 rifle.