7.62 x 54R shooters.
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7.62 x 54R shooters.
Any of you with an old Mosin-Nagant, Dragunov, or anything else chambered in 7.62x54R. The Armory.com has a sale on Russian surplus silver-tip (steel core) ammo. Get two(2) 440rd sardine cans (880 rounds total), with opener, for $139.98! I just bought some for my old Mosin-Nagant of 1943. Boy, if that old rifle could talk...
For those that don't know, the 7.62x54r is a Russian rifle round first developed in 1891 for the Mosin-Nagant. It is basically the ballistic twin of our .30-06, but due to the bullet's particularly elongated shape, which results in a relatively high ballistic coefficient, it actually compares closer to the .300 Winchester magnum past 500 yards.
Go here: Russia 7.62 x54r ammo 148gr FMJ
For those that don't know, the 7.62x54r is a Russian rifle round first developed in 1891 for the Mosin-Nagant. It is basically the ballistic twin of our .30-06, but due to the bullet's particularly elongated shape, which results in a relatively high ballistic coefficient, it actually compares closer to the .300 Winchester magnum past 500 yards.
Go here: Russia 7.62 x54r ammo 148gr FMJ
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It was snowing and -40 in Stalingrad the winter of 1942/43 and the M91/30's went bang just fine! Of course, there was a certain group of fascists encouraging the trigger-time that winter! With shipping, it came to $162.00 for me.
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The only reason I blame the snow is it pretty much closes all mountain access unless you have a sled(which I don't) and we do not have a shooting range here. Its always been just go out in the middle of nowhere to shoot. Kinda hard to do that in the middle of winter.
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The only reason I blame the snow is it pretty much closes all mountain access unless you have a sled(which I don't) and we do not have a shooting range here. Its always been just go out in the middle of nowhere to shoot. Kinda hard to do that in the middle of winter.
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