A Laminated Mosin

By Joe Berk

One of the best gun deals ever were the surplus Mosin-Nagant rifles that were everywhere until Obama was in office; now, you hardly see them anywhere, and when you do, they go for big bucks.  You used to be able to buy a Mosin for $79 at Big 5.  I started playing around with them about 15 years ago.  Today, when you see one, it’s not unusual for the store to have them marked at $500 (or more).

One of mine is a laminated stock Mosin 91/30, which is not seen too often.  I bought it about 10 years ago from Gunrunner’s in Duarte for $239 and stuck it in the safe.  Until today, I had not fired it.  It’s a Tula (there were two makers; Tula was one) with a round receiver.  It was made originally in 1939.  After the war, the Soviets refurbed most of them and a very few were fitted with laminated stocks.  I’ve never seen another one on the range.  It’s a pretty rifle, and I like the look of it.  Laminated wood stocks are usually much more stable than a standard stock, so I think that’s helping this rifle’s accuracy.

My laminated Mosin has the usual nicks and dings.  The serial numbers all match (stock, magazine, bolt, receiver, and bayonet).  The trigger is heavy, gritty, and just God-awful.  For the groups you see here, I used my new favorite Mosin load (42.0 grains of IMR 3031 and the PRVI PPU 150-grain jacketed softpoint boattail bullet).

The rifle, I think, shoots well (even with its terrible trigger, and it was pretty windy out there the day I shot the groups you see above).  Because I am a cheap SOB, I reused a target from a previous range session with my .375 H&H, so you can ignore the group to low right of the bullseye.  With my laminated-stock Mosin, I first shot 6 rounds at 50 yards to see where the rifle was printing (my aim point was at 6:00 on the bullseye).  Then I moved the target out to 100 yards and fired another 10 rounds using the same aimpoint.  The 50-yard group measures 1 1/8 inch; the 100-yard group measures 2 13/16 inch.  That’s not too bad for the first time out, and not too bad for an old guy using iron sights.

My rear sight is already all the way down.  I am going to look for a front sight with a taller post (if you know who might offer these, please let me know). The rifle probably has a 500-meter battlesight zero (or whatever the Russians used), and it was probably set up with the bayonet installed (which makes the rifle shoot to the right without the bayonet).   I can adjust the windage by drifting the front sight; I can’t lower the elevation without getting a taller front post.

You might be wondering what the bore looks like on this rifle.  I can show you:

There are some takeaways from the above photos:

      • The bore is better in some spots than in others.
      • When these rifles saw action in World War II (as this one probably did), the ammo used had corrosive primers.  The effects of that are visible.
      • Even Mosin-Nagant rifles with funky bores can shoot well.
      • The bore cleaning copper fouling solvent I use, Patch-Out, does a good job.  It works a lot better than Hoppes No. 9.  You don’t see any copper in the photos above.

Incidentally, if you’ve never seen the movie Enemy at the Gates, it’s one of the best movies ever (in my opinion).  The Mosin-Nagant rifle plays a starring role.  The opening scenes are really well done.  Take a look:

I’ve written a lot about the Mosin-Nagant 91/30 rifle.  I love these old rifles. Here are my earlier posts:

Three Mosin-Nagant Loads
Mosins, Sewer Pipes, and Lunar Landscapes
A Tale of Two Mosins
More Mosin Loads
Cast Bullet Mosin Loads
Mosins, and Enemy at the Gates
NJ State Police Museum
A Tale of Two Old Warhorses
Home on the Range
Stupid Hot 7.62x54R Ammo
Lee Ermey’s Guns Go To Auction
Revisiting World War II
Sniper!
Motorcycles and Milsurps

If you would like to learn more about the Mosin-Nagant rifle, the Lapin book is the definitive source:

The Mosin-Nagant Rifle is an easy and fascinating read.   I enjoyed it and I think you will, too.


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