So many of the type 99's were sporterized when they were brought back, they make a great deer rifle. Ammo is hard to get and very expensive. I have a type 38, a type 99 early, and a North China type 19 which is a type 99 clone in 7.7. I have gotten to reloading all my 7.7 and 6.5 Jap ammo. since it's so expensive. Great video and keep em' coming.
The Japanese continued to call it the Type 99. They didn't change the name because they referred to the model number rather than the quality @@gradyhernandez4699
You don't have to remove the 5 shot stipper clip after loading your 5 rounds , just close the bolt smartly, and the stripper clip will pop out, great videos, keep up the good work young man
Fine job. Nice ones are getting very very expensive. I was lucky enough to get a mint last ditch with intact mum before the prices went crazy. Keep making these great videos.
@@jebclark3988 can you please show me how it is what an where at on the receiver it's located and the difference between the two is one has the writing on the butt of stock written in Japanese I Saw one on a different video with the same thing only different mine is in black and the other one on the video was white writing
Your ability to type a coherent sentence must be similar to your ability to follow instructions. If you aren't sure what kind of gun you have it would be best not to fire it. Some Japanese rifles were for training only, and were never intended to fire. Doing so could cause serious injury to the shooter. Please find a professional that you can have a face to face consultation with.
I own one. What i could find it was made in 1938 or 1939. It has the aircraft sight and has the emporers seal almost ummolested. Some scratchmarks but a really nice rifle.
So many of the type 99's were sporterized when they were brought back, they make a great deer rifle. Ammo is hard to get and very expensive. I have a type 38, a type 99 early, and a North China type 19 which is a type 99 clone in 7.7. I have gotten to reloading all my 7.7 and 6.5 Jap ammo. since it's so expensive. Great video and keep em' coming.
Literally all rifles are good deer rifles.
Ammo is not " hard-to-find" for the 7.7
I have brand new Norma ammo for sale
It's the same.price as 3006 or 270 ammo at kir ammo
Such a good video. So cool to see the change in quality as options ran out. Thank you
Just picked up a type 99 last ditch for $400 with mostly intact mum and bayonet. Great video.
Who dubbed these "Last Ditch"?? 7.7 x 58
@@gradyhernandez4699 last ditch is referring to the fact it was made late war with cheaper materials.
@@Mabungo yes I know but the anglos dubbed it that,the Japanese didn't (?/
The Japanese continued to call it the Type 99. They didn't change the name because they referred to the model number rather than the quality @@gradyhernandez4699
I have a rare series 5 T99 Cutback Sniper, all matching, one of 2,500 from Nagoya. Missing it's matching scope. I hand load for it.
You don't have to remove the 5 shot stipper clip after loading your 5 rounds , just close the bolt smartly, and the stripper clip will pop out, great videos, keep up the good work young man
Yes I had one
Fine job. Nice ones are getting very very expensive. I was lucky enough to get a mint last ditch with intact mum before the prices went crazy. Keep making these great videos.
We got our last ditch type 99 last month for under $300 the good deals are still out there but are far more uncommon then they once were
Hey man, sick videos. Keep it up.
Great video and comparison. I would add a sling to each rifle to make its war time look more complete.
I have a "last ditch" Arisaka that has the same features as yours except mine does have the type 99 marking on the receiver.
Interesting how the bolt still has the “ plum handle” on it, and not the crudely welded plug style.
What is the way to tell the caliber of the arisaka rifles and where you can find it on the guns
It says type 38 or 99 on the receiver in Japanese the 38 is in 6.5x50 and the 99 is in 7.7x58
@@jebclark3988 can you please show me how it is what an where at on the receiver it's located and the difference between the two is one has the writing on the butt of stock written in Japanese I Saw one on a different video with the same thing only different mine is in black and the other one on the video was white writing
@@jamesjrpumphrey7146 oldmilitarymarkings.com/japanese_markings.html
Your ability to type a coherent sentence must be similar to your ability to follow instructions. If you aren't sure what kind of gun you have it would be best not to fire it. Some Japanese rifles were for training only, and were never intended to fire. Doing so could cause serious injury to the shooter. Please find a professional that you can have a face to face consultation with.
@@jebclark3988 Type 97 also 6.5mm
I own one. What i could find it was made in 1938 or 1939. It has the aircraft sight and has the emporers seal almost ummolested. Some scratchmarks but a really nice rifle.
Затворы арисак тип 30,тип 38 и тип 99 взаимозаменяемы или нет???
三八式普通実包ってjap ammoって言われてんスね…。三八式の方が反動も少なく精密な射撃が出来るかも知れないですね。九九式は威力を高める為に口径が大きくなって反動も強い