1864 Snider (Nepal) Un-boxing from IMA- Part 1
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- Опубликовано: 11 ноя 2016
- Un-boxing a handpick and cleaned 1864 Snider from IMA (International Military Antiques) in .577 Snider (Black Powder). This is one of the firearms from the Nepal cache they brought back in 2002.
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I was born and raised In a house in Kathmandu, Nepal which was 5 minutes walking distance from an old palace where all these guns had been stored for decades or even a century.
Wish I knew it. The palace looked haunted.
Anti, is the old palace still there? I hears it had been demolished after the 2015 earthquake
@@HarryFlashmanVC yes bro because earthquake doesnt effectsome buildings because buidings were made in ancient techno logy and pretty bold walls so earth quake effect only some temmples
@@HarryFlashmanVC it was partially destroyed but was declared unsafe for visiting or living so they destroyed it completely.. the municipality and the main Archaeological Department of the country were in conflict.. Archaeological Department wanted to rebuilt it in original style while the municipality wanted to build modern building with offices and a park.. few days ago I visited that area and saw foundations for modern concrete building.. the corrupt municipality officials have been acting against the local people who want to save their historical heritages.. there are many cases where the local people had to protest against the municipality so that the sites destroyed by the earthquake get rebuilt in original form rather than building ugly concrete so-called modern structures that destroy the historical architectural identity of the old city
@@aa6eheia156 thanks for the update. It is understandably difficult to consider prioritising the restoration of an old building when there are desperately needed spending priorities. If the useless twits at UN world heritage actually did something to make a difference they could perhaps fund such.
Thanks for this. Hugely helpful
Very nice
I never understood why IMA made up weird names for stuff. There was no such thing as “P-1864” Sniders, or “P-1871” Martini Henrys. The Snider didn’t even come out until 1866. I notice that yours has a Mk. III action, but the hammer from the II**. Was Snider action purchased from England, and used to convert Nepalese made muskets? Or is the entire weapon made in Nepal?
How much do they cost.
Are the antique guns from ima shootable?
Some yes, Some no. Get it checked by a gunsmith.
What caliber is it.
Jay Nepal!Proud to be Nepali!!
ho yaar
how much did you get that beauty for?
3 years ago it was $800 with a hand pick and bayonet. They are listed at $1050 with hand pick and no bayonet now.
@@snowlothar45 what ? Just 1000 dollars.
haha i offered my 1870 Enfield to them...it is in mint condition...absolutely no pitting what so ever...and they refused it ahhaah and now I see this....I have a 1870 Enfield snider Carbine version.577...i shot it 25x and they told me they were not interested....my gun is in mint...mint condition....any one have an answer to that?
Useless