Badger's Noise Magnet
Posted: Mon Mar 11, 2013 7:16 pm
Evenin 'oomans
We thought you might appreciate a picture of our M1891 Noise Magnet.
We think (our grasp of Cyrillic stamps isn't perfect) it started life as a Tula 7.62x54R rifle with a hexagonal receiver and was then re-arsenalled in the 1930s for a new barrel. It was re-proofed in 1940 and set aside for conversion to a sniper rifle. The work wasn't completed and it was re-issued, only partially prepared as a sniper rifle, in 1941. It was then put into storage in the 1950s. We acquired it a couple of years ago, loved the trigger and were quite surprised by its accuracy, and so have just had Paul Green at TVG finish the work required to fit a POSP scope to it using a side mounting plate. These were designed in the 1960s to allow the POSP scopes developed for the Dragunov sniper rifles to be fitted to older Mosin Nagant bolt actions. Russia planned to re-issue these bolt action rifles as platoon level sniper rifles to supplement the Dragunovs if the Cold War had turned a touch more tepid. It's therefore NOT a genuine WW2 sniper rifle, more a WW3 might have been...
We thought you might appreciate a picture of our M1891 Noise Magnet.
We think (our grasp of Cyrillic stamps isn't perfect) it started life as a Tula 7.62x54R rifle with a hexagonal receiver and was then re-arsenalled in the 1930s for a new barrel. It was re-proofed in 1940 and set aside for conversion to a sniper rifle. The work wasn't completed and it was re-issued, only partially prepared as a sniper rifle, in 1941. It was then put into storage in the 1950s. We acquired it a couple of years ago, loved the trigger and were quite surprised by its accuracy, and so have just had Paul Green at TVG finish the work required to fit a POSP scope to it using a side mounting plate. These were designed in the 1960s to allow the POSP scopes developed for the Dragunov sniper rifles to be fitted to older Mosin Nagant bolt actions. Russia planned to re-issue these bolt action rifles as platoon level sniper rifles to supplement the Dragunovs if the Cold War had turned a touch more tepid. It's therefore NOT a genuine WW2 sniper rifle, more a WW3 might have been...