Salut la gang !!!
Je voulais apprendre sur les SKS , j'ai donc offert a m79 d'asseyer d'en savoir plus sur sa SKS
qui na pas de marque d'arsenal . . . ???
Il ma formie des photos , il a méme trouvé un lien sur CGN .
Je vous montre ce que l'on a trouvé , Photo de sa SKS + lien et un lien de CGN !!!
http://www.yooperj.com/SKS-6.htmChina early miled
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http://www.yooperj.com/SKS-3.htmhttp://www.yooperj.com/SKS-15.htm[img]
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http://www.yooperj.com/SKS-10.htmVoici le lien de CGN :
In the history of chinese SKS making, during the 1950-70s, a lots of smaller size manufacturers were set up at remote countryside to prepare the potential war between China and America. But,those factories are not capable to produce major parts like barrel/receiver/hammer etc. so, factories like #216/#356/#296 will produce the major parts and sent to them for assembly.
The parts they sent out are never stamped with any maker's stamp but only the serial number because they don't know which factory will receive them. The smaller factory, usually have 4 digits code such as #9821/#5017, most of them does not have a marker stamp(works like branding today) and therefore no stamp on the gun, only the serial number. Most of the cases, the stock were installed after receiving the parts and only part of the serial number were pressed on the stock.
Those outsourced SKS once assembled, they were picked up by the military and transfer to the local military warehouse for storage, there are been several consolidation in Chinese military history where they merged and eliminated military regions, warehouse were merged too so the guns been moving around the country.
From what i know, only military firearm require serial numbers on all major parts, its for two major purpose. One, the gun will be assigned to a soldier, he must took the reasonability for the gun and make the gun as complete unit. The gun is government property. Second, it's for help indentifying the reminds of the solider if he/she died.
The best way to separate Chinese military SKS and civilian-force SKS is the receiver. If its forged, it was made for military use. If its riveted receiver , its for civilian use.
In the early 90s, lots of used SKS were sold in the US market and those SKS were either used military or civilian version. Serial numbers may not match because those were basically recycled at different factories.
The SKS you received, has all matching serial number and everything looks brand new, never fired. From the picture, which i am not very sure, but looks like the receiver is forged and even the stock has a serial number. That tells me everything is authentic.
http://www.canadiangunnutz.com/forum/showthread.php?630758-received-my-sks-no-factory-stamps-markings/page3Sa SKS serais t'elle une fait de différente piéce par une petit usine qui ne fesais qu'assemblé l'arme ???
La gang !!!
m79 et Alain