- Location
- Tucson, Arizona
Just remember while the SKS barrel is chrome plated, the gas cylinder is NOT. That has to be cleaned as well.
In the clone market, AIA produces a new production rifle based on the Lee Enfield No 4 Mk I design.
All the reviews I've read say its a great rifle. You can find them on Marstar's website. Saw one in person at my range and it had a very handsome finish to it. The owner said he was more then happy with its accuracy but I did not stay to watch it being fired.
I have the AIA No4. Got it for Xmas, paid $800. I put a 4-16x Hi-Lux scope on it. Fired it at 300m at Borden a few weeks ago. I'm very pleased with it.
I modified it by putting a pin where the front sling ring was for a bipod. One issue I did have was the rear hole for the rail was off by some 2mm, so had to get the hole in the rail redrilled offset to make it line up. All is fine now.
If you were going to put a mosin sniper together yourself ,goto www.westrifle.com banner at the top of this page and look at their mosin snipers on sale($500) this month.It would save you alot of work drilling holes in the wrong spots.They ship really fast and packaged good.
2mm are you serious? that is not quite .080" or over 1/16 inch F#CK me that is a lot to be off. I am glad it is fixed now though.
x3 At $500.00 the Westrifle clone should be a good deal, however, even if the optics and mount are made in russia, the look isnt quit right. For the more accurate looking sniper clone, the clone with ukrainian made mounts and scope are the way to go. Scope are blued steel and mounts are machined, not cast. Quality vary from clone to clone some are better puit together than others. I hope to finally have time to sight in my mosin repro sniper to find out how accurate they can be with various ammos.X2, that is a great price on todays market and from what I understand, they are professionally installed. I believe the mounts and optics are made on the original Soviet tooling? Maybe someone who knows better can clarify but for my money Westrifle's Mosin sniper clones seems the cheapest route on a non-bubba garage sniper. If only "my money" equaled the price, I'd own oneBTW the $135 Mosin I got from them is a beauty. Small arsenel repair on butt, otherwise 99%
I was at the local gunshop yesterday, and they have a Mosin for $200 that he will sell for $150. The action is smooth and seems to be tight when locked closed. Since it is definitely in my price range, I am considering it. I'm not worried about the gun being historically accurate. I just want an old wartime bolt action that won't break the bank on ammo. What should I be looking at on the gun to determine whether to buy it, or to keep looking? A look through the barrel didn't turn up any hugely obvious problems, but admittedly, I am relatively new to the gun world, and short of a tiny garden gnome living in the barrel, I probably wouldn't recognize a problem if I saw one. The stock seemed to be okay, and again, I'm just looking for something to have some fun with that I can shoot relatively accurately. Someone had suggested looking at the firing pin, but I'd have to disassemble the bolt to see it. Any other suggestions of things to examine on this gun before I shell out $150?



























