If they are "collector" items, yes, they are legal.freddo said:I'm not sure they would be legal to sell in Germany, which has very strict laws about ANY item with ANY type of nazi markings on them whatsoever.
January 2007, a friend bought an "unfired" P38 with nazi markings in Hamburg. The auction started at 5500 Euro for that item.
"Obliterations" were done from 2 main reasons:freddo said:Perhaps if the nazi markings were obliberated as some countries have done...
1. Firearms were later used in military training or even service. Nazi markings were considered de-motivating for the peasant turned soldier.
2. Anti-nazi paranoia following ww2.
As an parallel example, and some of you may know this, taliban memorablia already hit the market and is growing steady, even in North America. Watch and see what happens over time.
cornelunc said:Yes without Communist Bloc there will be no old stuff,in East Europe {communist} in the army I was trained with AK 47,but ather time in the army the Gov.make a special chamber in every factory full of rifles from second WW,if you are not in the regular army as a male you must fight with Mausers,Mosin Nagan or SKS,at my working place my gun was a Soviet Sks and need only 20 minutes to be fully armed and ready for action
After the fall of Communism the former socialist bloc have been start to sold this guns to American dealers almoust for nothing because of need of cash
Cornel
CSSA member
Interesting. I'm guessing Albania?
Most of the Euro East Block countries use to sh!t Ak's in large numbers daily in the last 40 years or so.
99% of the bolts or other ww2 relics were used and beaten into junk by the 1950's contingents.
As post communist era revealed, "in case of..." during the cold war, in E.Germany, Poland, Hungary, Romania, Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, there were enough AK's to arm everybody who could hold a gun in their hands. No need for Mosins, Mausers, SKS or any other nonsense.
Actualy, in that part of the world it's much harder than here to find milsurps from that era (that are in reasonable shape).
Most of milsurp ends in the melt, and it happens daily in that part of Europe and all over world. (UN resolution concerning small arms and some over-zealous contries feeling obliged to do more than they were asked? I don't know that answer...)
Of course, there are exceptions. Less than a week ago, a european company was selling among many other things, 129 "new" swedish Mausers (preserved in and by a swedish arsenal) and many other similar guns. I was scared and even embarassed to ask for the price, since a similar gun was selling at auction 10 years ago with 2-3000$US.


















































