Sks Msry (99% HOT)
While the AK-47 (adopted in 1949) proved superior for full-auto firepower, the USSR didn't scrap the SKS. Instead, it became the standard for satellite states and second-line troops. By the early 1950s, the Soviets had moved on, but they had already exported or lent-licensed the design to a dozen countries.
Buy the best example you can afford, clean it religiously, and enjoy one of the greatest military surplus rifles ever produced. sks msry
Introduction: More Than Just a Stepping Stone In the pantheon of 20th-century combat firearms, the SKS (Samozaryadny Karabin sistemy Simonova) often plays second fiddle to its successor, the iconic AK-47. However, for the Military Surplus (MSRY) enthusiast, collector, and shooter, the SKS is a titan. It represents the last generation of "old world" military rifle craftsmanship—forged steel, machined receivers, and a milled trigger group—combined with the lethality of an intermediate cartridge. While the AK-47 (adopted in 1949) proved superior
From the frozen trenches of the Winter War to the humid jungles of Vietnam and the dusty plains of the former Yugoslavia, the SKS served with distinction. Today, the surplus market is flooded (and sometimes starved) of these rifles, offering a fascinating cross-section of history, politics, and manufacturing prowess. Designed by Sergei Gavrilovich Simonov in 1945, the SKS was adopted by the Soviet Union just as WWII ended. It was a revolutionary design: a gas-operated, tilting-bolt semi-automatic rifle fed by a fixed 10-round magazine via stripper clips. Buy the best example you can afford, clean