Mine is a 1938 Tula . Came as it was stored in a soviet depo crate , covered in cosmoline , with two poches , a cleaning kit , bayonette , canvas strap , and oiler .
Very well done Sam. Looking at my 1942 Izhevsk 91/30, I can see its a refurbished which I suspected, but she's still a beauty. Thanks for taking the time to educate us on this historic Russian battlefield weapon.
Several years ago I read an article by a well-known gun writer, who was refinishing a stock on a 91/59 Mosin. He went to great lengths trying to reproduce the original 'butternut-colored' finish, without great success. He obviously wasn't a woodworker. I am, and I own a 91/59. Had I been there, I could've told him, "dude - it's plain old amber shellac. Go down to Home Depot and buy a can of it". 😄
I recently found your channel and subscribed due to my interest in Russian firearms and your excellent content. I have been collecting for almost 20 years and have had many Mosins over the years. One of the first rifles I bought back then was a 91/59 which I stupidly sold somewhere along the way. I recently sold a 1944 Izhevsk ex-sniper. I currently still have a 1940 Tula and a 1943 Izhevsk 91/30, a 1944 Tula M44, and 1956 Chinese T53. My favorite rifle is a Finnish M91 with a Tikka barrel stamp dated 1943 and a receiver date of 1897. Also have a couple nagant revolvers that are the same date and arsenal as the two 91/30s I mentioned earlier.
Good basic information, but there are some inaccuracies. 1. 4:22 Not hard to tell it's a replacement stock: this rifle left the factory in a half liner front/no liner rear stock. And pressed in liners aren't just "late and postwar". Tula started using them in early 1943 on all 91/30s, Izhevsk started using them only on PU snipers early to mid 1944. 1943 and early 1944 Izhevsk PU snipers had half liners both ends. 2. 4:53 The slashed box doesn't denote a Russian depot, but a Ukranan one (Arsenal #1 in Balaklaya, Ukraine). Arsenal 1 also made lots of stocks postwar (most or all Soviet-produced replacement stocks), so their mark on the stock doesn't necessarily mean the rifle received a refurbishment there at any point: only that the replacement stock was made there. 3. 9:28 Bluing inside the receiver("dip bluing") was introduced early war at both arsenals. Wartime examples left the factory with the inside of the receiver blued.
Some information presented contradicts many other things I have read that site sources. Why, since the age of the internet, hasn't anyone reached out to people that actually worked in these arsenals during WWII? Not as many workers left now but 20 years ago could have been easily done. They are the unsung heros of any war.
Great video! I have always looked at them knowing that they were redone, but never understood what actually happened to them. Some people don't care, but I love trying to understood the whole history of a rifle. They all have a story to tell. I got them cheap and did not really like the look of them, but after studying them andunderstanding more of the history, I fell in love with the ugly ducklings. This video just adds to my understanding and a deeper appreciation for individual history!
That 91/59 is a super nice rifle- I didn't know such an animal existed. The second Mosin that you showed as being "original" had a mismatched bolt? Also, refurbished rifles done by a govt military I always refer to as "re-arsenaled". IMO, the quality of a re-arsenaled gun is basically the same as new/unissued (as long as it's never been fired since). Many of the re-arsenaled rifles that were common out of Ukraine several years ago are superb examples w/brand new barrels, etc. Thanks for all of the good info.
I have a 91/59 and the action is smooth as butter, almost like an Enfield. The trigger has also been worked over, and it's smooth and crisp. It has been reblued. The stock is immaculate and the finish is amber shellac, instead of the reddish stuff on most Mosin's. It won a couple of unofficial Mosin beauty contests Gun and Game.... I found t it at a Big 5 Sporting Goods store, and I wish I'd also bought the other one they had in stock
Almost all American rifles were refurbished as well that saw usage during the war.Finding lets say an M1 Garand unmolested is rare as well and command high prices.I do have the Holy Grail of M44's Tula 1944 MO marked, that is unmolested and in mint shape.Went through 600 plus cases of rifles to find that one at the dealer years ago.I will check the others for marks to see what is what.Good info.
The US practice for cleaning guns in WW2 was to have every one in a squad clean their guns all at once. So everyone would throw their bolts, triggers, ect into a pile or tub of solvent and pull them all out at random to put the guns back together. A "numbers matching" rifle that actually saw combat is nearly impossible to find because of this.(m1 garand serial numbers on parts are actually lot numbers and never match the rifles serial number) Because there are effectively no matching rifles by the time they were surplused, the CMP doesn't have to worry about reusing worn out parts to keep the rifles original when they sell them to the US public (barrels matching receivers is another story, my M1 is post war but the barrel was replaced with a NOS surplus barrel). Most of the time if you find a rifle with parts that all date to the same time of manufacture, its likely faked to make the rifle worth more. Of course this doesn't mean every rifle is faked and so long as all of the parts look equally worn with no abnormally good or bad looking parts on them like a black bolt in a grey receiver, or a pitted op-rod on an otherwise pristine rifle, it very well could be a complete factory rifle.
The thing about Mosin`s you never know what you're gonna get. I have a Chinese type 53. It was nasty. Black crusty stock, rusty bolt etc. It had still been dipped in cosmoline. Inside I found dried mud a grass. I'm guessing the individual that carried it didn't make it home. I haven't reassembled it yet. It has a Tula barrel bands.
Chinese mosins were handed out to the people's militia and used and abused to no end. I have one who's bore is smooth due to having been fired so much.
My newest edition is a 43 izzy. The machining is super rough compared to my earlier rifles. It's refurbished but the stock is a wartime stock. The sling swivels are just holes in the wood with the curved over metal plate on one side of the lip.
In early 1969 a guy shot at me with a type 44. I traded him 20 rounds of 5.56 for it. The chamber was very deeply pitted, the stock is home made out of some soft tropical wood and the front sight was almost completely off the left side of the dovetail. I bought a Russian take off barrel and put on it. I burnished all the original markings off the newish barrel and had a local engraving shop replace those markings with some like the originals. The stock doesn't like Texas dry air and split in a couple places almost immediately after arriving. I still shoot it occasionally in CMP competitions.
I picked one up yesterday. It's Russian, has all the stamps, but it also has an American refurbish tag on it. I guess it went through a factory in the states at some point too
Got a 1945 M44, no import marks, no refurb marks...nice condition all matching. Seen some pictures of soldiers returning from Korea with same model. Refurb is OK, some better than others.
I have a 1937 tula 91/30 and its all matching numbers with the same font style. The stock has a armament 1 stamp on it so I figure it was repaired or replaced at some point during or after war.
Everything is worth more in a factory original configuration cracked stocks do happen some become a bubba victim.Wish we had a limited run of replica Mosin Nagants here in the states from century arms crazy how everyone clones AK variants and overlooks the true practical hunting rifle.
When hot blued the whole action would be put in the bluing tank. How did the Russians blue the outside of the receiver and the inside was in the white ? Did the bluing just wear off with use ?
I know there is speculation on where the 91/59 came from . As you said possibly Bulgaria , they did a lot with the M95 , converting the long rifle to carbine/short rifle length , yet with the stock showing to be Czech , why would they only make the stocks and then send them to Bulgaria . So possibly they where done in Czechoslovak
Some of the old thinking is changing....that the kk10 in a circle and B in the star was really a Bulgarian mark on the stock. The original Czech thinking was a best guess at the time, just like the change to Bulgarian is thought to be a better guess today. Much of this milsurp science is theory, which keeps it so interesting.
I have an imperial M91. it doesn't have any of the refurbishment markings shown in the video but even if it's made in the Izievsk factory, it have the SA marking which mean that it has been in Finland. does it mean it has been refurbished in Finland?
I don't understand the history aspect of collecting just because a gun was built in 1943 doesn't mean it was ever used a guard at a supply depot might have used it never getting anywhere near the frontline. A luger might been in a officers desk at a training base the whole war.
Surplus guns that are all matching numbers, that have never been “refurbished”, or through a field armory for repair, have never seen service and to me, have no character.
I have this question too. I have a 91/44 all matching numbers, and I mean every part that has a number matches. When I purchased the rifle it was still wrapped in wax paper and twine.
The 91/30 my late Father got in the mid '60's...no import marks, the stock has some dings, and has a dark, what I'd call an oil rubbed finish. The slots for the sling have no metal around them. No box refurbish stamps. The bolt is dark, not shiny. The receiver and barrel is dark, matte black, inside if receiver is in white. Marked with a triangle with an arrow, serial number is K, with 5 digits. Date stamped, 1943. What do I have?
no facts presented as far as markings it all seems, seems, seems, ,infer,infer,infer. Sorry Sam there are finite terms in regards to Mosin 91/30 what a bunch of BS This guy want to be a mosin expert. And that's OK just be aware this is information gained from a United States perspective rather than county's of origin
A big Sam hoping you could help me with this one. I just won a bid on GunBroker and I got me an original mosin 1938 91/30 was hoping you could help me with its history. It's definitely an original non-refurbished the bolt is mismatched no import marks and is duffle cut. There are no finnish marks but there are wire hangers for the sling. I'm assuming a GI brought it back but where from. Do you think it could be a Spanish civil war rifle?
Howdy! I know this rifle, it is very interesting indeed. There are virtually no known Spanish Civil War Mosins made in 1938, and coupled with the fact that it is duffle cut, we can safely rule that out from being a possibility. This rifle is a service member bringback, most likely from WWII or Korea, also with a slight possibility of coming from Vietnam. Congrats on the very cool rifle!
Mine is a 1942 says Georgia UT. What is this was it made in Utah? I also have letters and like a square on the stock with a line going through it its a 91 30 so alo I see a mj or mc can't maout it its an c or j what are these marking on the stock
Georgia RUSSIA! U and T are likely T for Tula and U being a Russian marking for some other identification. There were Remington built Mosin's but I don't think it was in Utah!
@@RadioReprised I believe I have the same type as the first poster does. The markings he has if they are the same are done in a machine type fashion where the letters and numbers are made by little dots instead of actual stampings. Mine is a 1944 91-30 and on the left side of the receiver say M44 RUSSIAN 7.62 X 54R and underneath that says C.A.I. GEORGIA UT M44087652
I believe the Finns prior to WWII were using actions procured from Russian sources one way or the other. And some Russian actions and entire guns were made in the USA. I have one refurbished mosin and like it as a shooter and have no interest in it for collecting.
It was a rifle designed to be wielded by mainly uneducated peasant class people. And they needed several millions of them. They were not "made to be junky" but they were made to be simple, reliable, and easy to produce. As far as if they were ever good shootin guns, they still see active duty service in several militaries as marksmen rifles. One of the few guns still in modern service after well over 100 years
My m38 has a laminated stock. I think it’s rather pretty. It’s marked with the number 2 and something like a square with a diagonal line through it. Of course there’s no finish like the Finnish finish.
Mine too...on a '40 Tula...it looks like a Ruger Gunsite Scout stock and the whole Rifle is the ''prettiest'' 91/30 I have seen. My '42 Izzy is really nice too but not like the Tula!@@robertmiedel4104
Mine is a 1938 Tula . Came as it was stored in a soviet depo crate , covered in cosmoline , with two poches , a cleaning kit , bayonette , canvas strap , and oiler .
Very well done Sam. Looking at my 1942 Izhevsk 91/30, I can see its a refurbished which I suspected, but she's still a beauty. Thanks for taking the time to educate us on this historic Russian battlefield weapon.
Enjoy the history and info. Thanks for sharing 👍
Several years ago I read an article by a well-known gun writer, who was refinishing a stock on a 91/59 Mosin. He went to great lengths trying to reproduce the original 'butternut-colored' finish, without great success. He obviously wasn't a woodworker. I am, and I own a 91/59. Had I been there, I could've told him, "dude - it's plain old amber shellac. Go down to Home Depot and buy a can of it". 😄
I recently found your channel and subscribed due to my interest in Russian firearms and your excellent content. I have been collecting for almost 20 years and have had many Mosins over the years. One of the first rifles I bought back then was a 91/59 which I stupidly sold somewhere along the way. I recently sold a 1944 Izhevsk ex-sniper. I currently still have a 1940 Tula and a 1943 Izhevsk 91/30, a 1944 Tula M44, and 1956 Chinese T53. My favorite rifle is a Finnish M91 with a Tikka barrel stamp dated 1943 and a receiver date of 1897.
Also have a couple nagant revolvers that are the same date and arsenal as the two 91/30s I mentioned earlier.
Excellent tutorial on Refurbished vs. original. Thank you Sam for sharing your knowledge.
Good basic information, but there are some inaccuracies. 1. 4:22 Not hard to tell it's a replacement stock: this rifle left the factory in a half liner front/no liner rear stock. And pressed in liners aren't just "late and postwar". Tula started using them in early 1943 on all 91/30s, Izhevsk started using them only on PU snipers early to mid 1944. 1943 and early 1944 Izhevsk PU snipers had half liners both ends. 2. 4:53 The slashed box doesn't denote a Russian depot, but a Ukranan one (Arsenal #1 in Balaklaya, Ukraine). Arsenal 1 also made lots of stocks postwar (most or all Soviet-produced replacement stocks), so their mark on the stock doesn't necessarily mean the rifle received a refurbishment there at any point: only that the replacement stock was made there. 3. 9:28 Bluing inside the receiver("dip bluing") was introduced early war at both arsenals. Wartime examples left the factory with the inside of the receiver blued.
You have so very many nice Mosins! You keep pulling them out of your hat. Thanks so much for sharing them!
Some information presented contradicts many other things I have read that site sources. Why, since the age of the internet, hasn't anyone reached out to people that actually worked in these arsenals during WWII? Not as many workers left now but 20 years ago could have been easily done. They are the unsung heros of any war.
Great video! I have always looked at them knowing that they were redone, but never understood what actually happened to them. Some people don't care, but I love trying to understood the whole history of a rifle. They all have a story to tell. I got them cheap and did not really like the look of them, but after studying them andunderstanding more of the history, I fell in love with the ugly ducklings. This video just adds to my understanding and a deeper appreciation for individual history!
That 91/59 is a super nice rifle- I didn't know such an animal existed. The second Mosin that you showed as being "original" had a mismatched bolt? Also, refurbished rifles done by a govt military I always refer to as "re-arsenaled". IMO, the quality of a re-arsenaled gun is basically the same as new/unissued (as long as it's never been fired since). Many of the re-arsenaled rifles that were common out of Ukraine several years ago are superb examples w/brand new barrels, etc. Thanks for all of the good info.
I have a 91/59 came to me look new has 1943 stamp
I have a 91/59 and the action is smooth as butter, almost like an Enfield. The trigger has also been worked over, and it's smooth and crisp. It has been reblued. The stock is immaculate and the finish is amber shellac, instead of the reddish stuff on most Mosin's. It won a couple of unofficial Mosin beauty contests Gun and Game.... I found t it at a Big 5 Sporting Goods store, and I wish I'd also bought the other one they had in stock
Nice finish on the finished Finish Rifle.
😂😂😂
I have a 1943 91/30 with East German refurbishment markings
Almost all American rifles were refurbished as well that saw usage during the war.Finding lets say an M1 Garand unmolested is rare as well and command high prices.I do have the Holy Grail of M44's Tula 1944 MO marked, that is unmolested and in mint shape.Went through 600 plus cases of rifles to find that one at the dealer years ago.I will check the others for marks to see what is what.Good info.
The US practice for cleaning guns in WW2 was to have every one in a squad clean their guns all at once. So everyone would throw their bolts, triggers, ect into a pile or tub of solvent and pull them all out at random to put the guns back together.
A "numbers matching" rifle that actually saw combat is nearly impossible to find because of this.(m1 garand serial numbers on parts are actually lot numbers and never match the rifles serial number) Because there are effectively no matching rifles by the time they were surplused, the CMP doesn't have to worry about reusing worn out parts to keep the rifles original when they sell them to the US public (barrels matching receivers is another story, my M1 is post war but the barrel was replaced with a NOS surplus barrel). Most of the time if you find a rifle with parts that all date to the same time of manufacture, its likely faked to make the rifle worth more. Of course this doesn't mean every rifle is faked and so long as all of the parts look equally worn with no abnormally good or bad looking parts on them like a black bolt in a grey receiver, or a pitted op-rod on an otherwise pristine rifle, it very well could be a complete factory rifle.
The thing about Mosin`s you never know what you're gonna get. I have a Chinese type 53. It was nasty. Black crusty stock, rusty bolt etc. It had still been dipped in cosmoline. Inside I found dried mud a grass. I'm guessing the individual that carried it didn't make it home. I haven't reassembled it yet. It has a Tula barrel bands.
Chinese mosins were handed out to the people's militia and used and abused to no end. I have one who's bore is smooth due to having been fired so much.
So very interesting ! Love your channel. Please keep up the great work. You are appreciated👍
My newest edition is a 43 izzy. The machining is super rough compared to my earlier rifles. It's refurbished but the stock is a wartime stock. The sling swivels are just holes in the wood with the curved over metal plate on one side of the lip.
Thank you man I learn a lot from my mosin ! I got refurbished
Thank you for information, very informative and clear!! Thank you again !!!
In early 1969 a guy shot at me with a type 44. I traded him 20 rounds of 5.56 for it. The chamber was very deeply pitted, the stock is home made out of some soft tropical wood and the front sight was almost completely off the left side of the dovetail. I bought a Russian take off barrel and put on it. I burnished all the original markings off the newish barrel and had a local engraving shop replace those markings with some like the originals. The stock doesn't like Texas dry air and split in a couple places almost immediately after arriving. I still shoot it occasionally in CMP competitions.
I picked one up yesterday. It's Russian, has all the stamps, but it also has an American refurbish tag on it. I guess it went through a factory in the states at some point too
Good info, thank you
Wish you had talked about barrels regarding this subject of refurbishment.
Thanks for the explanation.
My M44, made in 1944, definitely seems to be refurbished. There is bluing inside the chamber.
Got a 1945 M44, no import marks, no refurb marks...nice condition all matching. Seen some pictures of soldiers returning from Korea with same model. Refurb is OK, some better than others.
I think all 1942 and later were blued inside the receiver to expedite production on original rifles, so that being a refurb sign wouldn't apply.
I have a 1937 tula 91/30 and its all matching numbers with the same font style. The stock has a armament 1 stamp on it so I figure it was repaired or replaced at some point during or after war.
Thanks for sharing.
Everything is worth more in a factory original configuration cracked stocks do happen some become a bubba victim.Wish we had a limited run of replica Mosin Nagants here in the states from century arms crazy how everyone clones AK variants and overlooks the true practical hunting rifle.
When hot blued the whole action would be put in the bluing tank. How did the Russians blue the outside of the receiver and the inside was in the white ? Did the bluing just wear off with use ?
What has more value? Refurbished or original? I’m assuming original?
You've done your homework. Good video. Again. If these guns could talk.
I know there is speculation on where the 91/59 came from . As you said possibly Bulgaria , they did a lot with the M95 , converting the long rifle to carbine/short rifle length , yet with the stock showing to be Czech , why would they only make the stocks and then send them to Bulgaria . So possibly they where done in Czechoslovak
Some of the old thinking is changing....that the kk10 in a circle and B in the star was really a Bulgarian mark on the stock. The original Czech thinking was a best guess at the time, just like the change to Bulgarian is thought to be a better guess today. Much of this milsurp science is theory, which keeps it so interesting.
My 91/30 doesn’t have the import markings, what could be the cause of this?
I have an imperial M91. it doesn't have any of the refurbishment markings shown in the video but even if it's made in the Izievsk factory, it have the SA marking which mean that it has been in Finland. does it mean it has been refurbished in Finland?
I don't understand the history aspect of collecting just because a gun was built in 1943 doesn't mean it was ever used a guard at a supply depot might have used it never getting anywhere near the frontline. A luger might been in a officers desk at a training base the whole war.
Good information, Thanks.
Surplus guns that are all matching numbers, that have never been “refurbished”, or through a field armory for repair, have never seen service and to me, have no character.
Hey Sam is there such a term of unissued I have a 42 Izzy all matching # and no refurb markings
I have this question too. I have a 91/44 all matching numbers, and I mean every part that has a number matches. When I purchased the rifle it was still wrapped in wax paper and twine.
Was the hexagon receiver pre ww2 ? I have one, just wondering.
Looking at one stamped 1897. It has that boxy look on the chamber like the Finnish one. Does that mean it's Finnish or was that how the old ones are?
Had one that had Finland 1934 stamped on it
The 91/30 my late Father got in the mid '60's...no import marks, the stock has some dings, and has a dark, what I'd call an oil rubbed finish. The slots for the sling have no metal around them. No box refurbish stamps. The bolt is dark, not shiny. The receiver and barrel is dark, matte black, inside if receiver is in white. Marked with a triangle with an arrow, serial number is K, with 5 digits. Date stamped, 1943. What do I have?
Howdy sir, you are describing a 91/30 produced by the Izhevsk factory that is most likely a WWII or Korean War trophy
@@BigSamMosinMuseum It almost seems too nice for an original, unmessed with rifle. From what I discribed, could this be the original finish?
Your videos are interesting.
no facts presented as far as markings it all seems, seems, seems, ,infer,infer,infer. Sorry Sam there are finite terms in regards to Mosin 91/30 what a bunch of BS This guy want to be a mosin expert. And that's OK just be aware this is information gained from a United States perspective rather than county's of origin
A big Sam hoping you could help me with this one. I just won a bid on GunBroker and I got me an original mosin 1938 91/30 was hoping you could help me with its history. It's definitely an original non-refurbished the bolt is mismatched no import marks and is duffle cut. There are no finnish marks but there are wire hangers for the sling. I'm assuming a GI brought it back but where from. Do you think it could be a Spanish civil war rifle?
Howdy! I know this rifle, it is very interesting indeed. There are virtually no known Spanish Civil War Mosins made in 1938, and coupled with the fact that it is duffle cut, we can safely rule that out from being a possibility. This rifle is a service member bringback, most likely from WWII or Korea, also with a slight possibility of coming from Vietnam. Congrats on the very cool rifle!
@@BigSamMosinMuseum awesome I just won it let me guess you were probably bidding too? Lol
If my 91/59 was refurbished where is the mark I don't see it?
Mine is a 1942 says Georgia UT. What is this was it made in Utah? I also have letters and like a square on the stock with a line going through it its a 91 30 so alo I see a mj or mc can't maout it its an c or j what are these marking on the stock
Georgia RUSSIA! U and T are likely T for Tula and U being a Russian marking for some other identification. There were Remington built Mosin's but I don't think it was in Utah!
@@RadioReprised I believe I have the same type as the first poster does. The markings he has if they are the same are done in a machine type fashion where the letters and numbers are made by little dots instead of actual stampings. Mine is a 1944 91-30 and on the left side of the receiver say M44 RUSSIAN 7.62 X 54R and underneath that says C.A.I. GEORGIA UT M44087652
I believe the Finns prior to WWII were using actions procured from Russian sources one way or the other. And some Russian actions and entire guns were made in the USA.
I have one refurbished mosin and like it as a shooter and have no interest in it for collecting.
Good stuff
Big Sam........ Were they ever a good shooting gun? Or were they just built to sling lead? It would be insane if they were built junky!
It was a rifle designed to be wielded by mainly uneducated peasant class people. And they needed several millions of them. They were not "made to be junky" but they were made to be simple, reliable, and easy to produce. As far as if they were ever good shootin guns, they still see active duty service in several militaries as marksmen rifles. One of the few guns still in modern service after well over 100 years
@@RogerCharlamange😂So, what did they issue to their "educated" people?
@@stepanbandera5206satan 2 rockets
@@stepanbandera5206
In the Soviet era, many "educated" people were issued all-expense-paid vacations to Siberia...😉
@@charlestaylor253 Yes they were.
Mine is 1942 not refurbished and said that it was used in stalingrade
Fantastic
Can I send picks of my 91/30 for more info
What about the laminated stocks can you explain them
My m38 has a laminated stock. I think it’s rather pretty. It’s marked with the number 2 and something like a square with a diagonal line through it.
Of course there’s no finish like the Finnish finish.
Mine too...on a '40 Tula...it looks like a Ruger Gunsite Scout stock and the whole Rifle is the ''prettiest'' 91/30 I have seen. My '42 Izzy is really nice too but not like the Tula!@@robertmiedel4104
So, they used the ,... Finnish finish ? Gotta ask !
Yeah. The same way Polish rifle's actions and triggers were made smoother using...
🙄
so that finnish gun, has a nice.... finnish?
I would prefer refurbished
I love how we all say joe smoe 😂
I know Joe Smoe, and he's one hell of a gunsmith!
😏
Hey Big Sam got those stripper clips in will try them out in my mosins this weekend with each invidual performance.
The numbers didnt even match on the so called non refurbished one
Is a fake mosin a thing?
what do you mean?