Turkish "mosin" ???
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Turkish "mosin" ???
1st off excuse my ignorance on surplus bolt actions. I came across what looked like a mosin carbine the other day at a small shop. The guy said it was the Turkish version of a nagant. I googled several different things and came up with nothing. Any ideas on what it could be? If so quality? Price range? Waste of time?
Thanks.
Thanks.
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Re: Turkish "mosin" ???
I had Mauser in 8mm shoot great till i forget to clean it after shooting surplus ammo.
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Re: Turkish "mosin" ???
Real Mauser rifles are the benchmark standard for modern bolt action rifles.
I have seen some Turkish copies of various types and many were quite good.
I have also seen some Turkish copies I was hesitant to even touch, they looked uber-rough, poorly made.
Crush, kill, mangle, maim, destroy.
I have seen some Turkish copies of various types and many were quite good.
I have also seen some Turkish copies I was hesitant to even touch, they looked uber-rough, poorly made.
Crush, kill, mangle, maim, destroy.
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"That boy's paradigm don't always add up to four nickels...."
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Re: Turkish "mosin" ???
JBones wrote:Thank you very much. How are the as far as quality/accuracy?guncrank1 wrote:No such thing
It is a Mauser rifle
Turk rank as a shooter - no collector value to me. The rifle have bucket accuracy- minute of deer for the most part
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Re: Turkish "mosin" ???
Go here
http://7.62x54r.net/
And here
Mosin-Nagant Dot Net Presents:
Mosin - Mausers And The Nation Of Turkey
http://www.mosinnagant.net/global%20mos ... Mosins.asp
Note the sections underlined
http://7.62x54r.net/
And here
Mosin-Nagant Dot Net Presents:
Mosin - Mausers And The Nation Of Turkey
http://www.mosinnagant.net/global%20mos ... Mosins.asp
Note the sections underlined
So some Mosins while not of Turkish manufacturer may have Turkish markings and some are even chambered in 8mm.During World War I the standard Turkish military long arm was the M1903 Mauser although the other Mausers mentioned above were also used, as were additional Model 98s supplied to the Turks by their German ally. In addition to the Brothers Mauser’s gift to human betterment the Turks made use of Russia’s Mosin-Nagant 7.62 mm M1891 rifle. The Turks acquired these weapons by two methods: capture from the Russians during the bitter fighting in eastern Anatolia, mostly in 1915, and as war-aid from the Germans, who captured huge quantities of them in Europe on the Eastern Front. Many of the German-supplied Mosins had been altered to fire the standard German 7.9 x 57 mm military round, easing supply and logistics problems for the Turks. These Russian rifles in the original caliber were used largely in eastern Anatolia, where there was always the possibility that more ammunition and rifles could be captured from the Russians. Mosins, evidently of both calibers, were also used on the Southern Front in Palestine. Why Turkish units in the Holy Land should have been so blessed is a mystery. As ever, many of these rifles can be identified as Turkish by their Arabic numbers, crescents, etc.
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Re: Turkish "mosin" ???
Great information! Thank you, I'm going to try to stop and actually check out the rifle this afternoon.WLJ wrote:Go here
http://7.62x54r.net/
And here
Mosin-Nagant Dot Net Presents:
Mosin - Mausers And The Nation Of Turkey
http://www.mosinnagant.net/global%20mos ... Mosins.asp
Note the sections underlinedSo some Mosins while not of Turkish manufacturer may have Turkish markings and some are even chambered in 8mm.During World War I the standard Turkish military long arm was the M1903 Mauser although the other Mausers mentioned above were also used, as were additional Model 98s supplied to the Turks by their German ally. In addition to the Brothers Mauser’s gift to human betterment the Turks made use of Russia’s Mosin-Nagant 7.62 mm M1891 rifle. The Turks acquired these weapons by two methods: capture from the Russians during the bitter fighting in eastern Anatolia, mostly in 1915, and as war-aid from the Germans, who captured huge quantities of them in Europe on the Eastern Front. Many of the German-supplied Mosins had been altered to fire the standard German 7.9 x 57 mm military round, easing supply and logistics problems for the Turks. These Russian rifles in the original caliber were used largely in eastern Anatolia, where there was always the possibility that more ammunition and rifles could be captured from the Russians. Mosins, evidently of both calibers, were also used on the Southern Front in Palestine. Why Turkish units in the Holy Land should have been so blessed is a mystery. As ever, many of these rifles can be identified as Turkish by their Arabic numbers, crescents, etc.