Where have you been for the last forty years breacher?breacher wrote:Money is not the only thing with value.
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Where have you been for the last forty years breacher?breacher wrote:Money is not the only thing with value.
I'm not saying don't shoot it!, just appreciate for what it is......breacher wrote:Money is not the only thing with value.snayperskaya wrote:I agree that ultimately people can, and will, do what they want with their own rifle and if someone wants to scope an old rifle then obviously that's their choice but I believe the OP has purchased a rather sought after Hungarian M91/30 Mosin and is contemplating fitting a reproduction scope to it to create a reproduction sniper.......Hungarian Mosin's of any favour are quite rare compared to those of other nations and nice clean examples (as I believe his is) will only increase in value but that value will decrease considerably if the receiver is permanently drilled in order to fit a scope mount.Mosin prices are climbing as stocks are drying up, especially with the sanctions against Russia that don't appear to be dropped anytime soon and nice original examples are becoming increasingly hard to find.breacher wrote:Its your rifle. Enjoy it any way you want. To many people trying to tell others how to live their lives.
As long as its a repro rather than a counterfeit..........
Happy shooting !
As I said it is obviously up to the individual as to what they do with their rifle and I don't think it is a case of trying to tell people how to live their lives, some people may not realise that the rifle they have is particularly rare or uncommon and best off being left in its original configuration.
Say the rifle doubles in value in the owners lifetime ? Or even triples. Or even quadruples !
He will leave a few hundred or a couple of thousand more in his estate.
Me, I would value 10 or 20 years of shooting at far more than that !
And if these original matching number rifles were so sought after, they would be snapped up by purists and would cost so much, nobody would even think of altering them. But they are not. Some are so cheap they end up next to the scrap in the deac market !
yea....Alonebreacher wrote:Or if you want to scope a ww2 era rifle but not make a repro ww2 sniper............
I wanted to enter NRA matches with a "pre 1955" criteria.
I have put a 1950s Pecar on a 1950s k98 ( in 30.06 so could never enter a match for ww2 rifles anyway )
So, I get to enjoy the rifle in the way I want without trying to pretend my rifle is anything more than a 1950s rifle with a 1950s scope !
How would you know ?Maggot wrote:yea....Alonebreacher wrote:Or if you want to scope a ww2 era rifle but not make a repro ww2 sniper............
I wanted to enter NRA matches with a "pre 1955" criteria.
I have put a 1950s Pecar on a 1950s k98 ( in 30.06 so could never enter a match for ww2 rifles anyway )
So, I get to enjoy the rifle in the way I want without trying to pretend my rifle is anything more than a 1950s rifle with a 1950s scope !
It's not necessarily a case of being a purist because if someone wants to permanently alter a relatively common rifle, and there are plenty of cheap run of the mill 91/30 Mosin's etc out there, buy a beater and crack on and each to their own, but surely the rare and uncommon variants of any make are worth preserving as they are?.breacher wrote:Joe at Gunshop in Barnet had a great response to the "purists".
Whenever one stuck his nose in when another customer asked about such a modification......
He would say "Ok - you want it preserved - I will sell it to you then."
They usually had no slot or no cash or some other excuse.
Joe then gave them short shrift !!!
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