Tokarev question.

tinymike66

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So I purchased a tokarev
It was advertised as a 1938 t33 Russian Tula

After receiving more pictures from seller.
I noticed TT-C on slide and the cccp grips.
Doing some research, cccp grips came on wwii Era and TT-C are apparently Romanian made
Also 1938 would have been t30 model

Maybe I'm wrong!! Anyone got some input for me.
I can email pics if u want.

Cheers
 
So I purchased a tokarev
It was advertised as a 1938 t33 Russian Tula

After receiving more pictures from seller.
I noticed TT-C on slide and the cccp grips.
Doing some research, cccp grips came on wwii Era and TT-C are apparently Romanian made
Also 1938 would have been t30 model

Maybe I'm wrong!! Anyone got some input for me.
I can email pics if u want.

Cheers

TT30 1930 - 1936
TT33 1937 -

AFAIK, Romanian - TTC (not TT-C)
 
Good chance it's a mixmaster, like so many Soviet small arms from pre-WWII onward. The Soviet small arms refurbishing industry was a massive make work project post war. Kept hands busy while they de-mobilized. Mosin, SVT's, TT33's... Just about everything went through the refurb process. In a way, it's a testament to their arms design that they could mixmaster the guns and just randomly grab parts and slap them together and come out with a "good as new" gun in the end.

Also a good chance the seller isn't being dishonest, just doesn't know the full story of his pistol, just looked at the most obvious markings and went from there.
 
so I contacted the buyer In regards to my concern, he assures me that the Tokarev is definitely a 1938 and that indeed it is Russian.
He said the TTC markings has to with new export markings
this was his response:

"It is 1938 and it is Russian.

The markings are the new export markings.

Take a look at Weimajacks's latest advertisements for other examples."
 
Good chance it's a mixmaster, like so many Soviet small arms from pre-WWII onward. The Soviet small arms refurbishing industry was a massive make work project post war. Kept hands busy while they de-mobilized. Mosin, SVT's, TT33's... Just about everything went through the refurb process. In a way, it's a testament to their arms design that they could mixmaster the guns and just randomly grab parts and slap them together and come out with a "good as new" gun in the end.

Also a good chance the seller isn't being dishonest, just doesn't know the full story of his pistol, just looked at the most obvious markings and went from there.

Oh no, by no means do I think seller is being dishonest.
I am the one with limited knowledge,
So I ask around to get opinions and learn as I go.
 
Oh no, by no means do I think seller is being dishonest.
I am the one with limited knowledge,
So I ask around to get opinions and learn as I go.

Best way to go.

There are a couple of dealers that I trust implicitly, and a few people around here with deep knowledge of the Reds (Horilka is one). The wide variety of markings can give you a headache, and it's easy to make wrong assumptions about a gun's origins.

Some people get twisted out of shape when a seller says something about a gun that turns out not to be true. Most times the seller is saying what he believes to be true. I'm fairly tolerant of that kind of mistake personally.
 
I was under the impression that the TT-C markings have been around in Russia for a while and it's usually the TT-signal (Russian S is written as a C) or blank firing guns that are marked like that. So we are now getting the blank firing guns that have been re-converted back.

Here's one of many threads about it in Russian for those that read it (remove the blanks) forum . guns . ru/forummessage/192/939958.html
 
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