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Russian .22 trainers?
Are there any? There is a .22 sitting at the shop I am eyeballing. Supposedly it's a Russian
.22 trainer? Looking for pics and models to compare to verify. It's bolt action with a five round clip. Any info would be appreciated.
Thanks,
VonXulu
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06-15-2009 04:11 AM
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Originally Posted by
VonXulu
Are there any? There is a .22 sitting at the shop I am eyeballing. Supposedly it's a
Russian
.22 trainer? Looking for pics and models to compare to verify. It's bolt action with a five round clip. Any info would be appreciated.
Also other soviet bloc .22 trainers out there. Many Romanians, both mag-fed and single shot.
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Thanks Edlmann, but do you have any model numbers or makers names I can do a search on? Looking for a starting point.
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If you google on Tula trainers you might get some hits. I know that AIM surplus and JG sales were offering them a year or so ago. They were either
the TOZ 71 or 78 models. They are decent shooters and the 78 model came with 5 and 10 round clips.
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The Romanians used a single-shot, bolt action Model 1956 training rifle and the more often seen Model 1969 bolt-action 5-shot repeater.
There are unconfirmed reports that a version of the AK-74 in .22 Long Rifle (sold in a commercial variant in the states as the AKT-98 imported by Armamentos in Florida and the WASR-22 by Century International Arms) is currently in use as a training rifle.
These were manufactured at Cugir.
Poland used the single-shot, bolt-action Mosin-Nagant Model 1944, rechambered in rimfire and given the Model 1948 nomenclature. The Poles also built some Type III milled receiver AK-47's up in .22 LR for use as trainers.
Bulgaria built the RKKS .22 LR version of the Type III AK-47.
The East Germans built a select-fire AKM/AK-74 variant trainer in .22 LR, the KK-MPi Model 1969 . The sub-caliber magazines were sold here a few years ago and several parts sets were imported by Interordnance. At least one set was built up as a PMDS and was offered for sale maybe three years ago.
The russians use a suppressed, crank-bolt action, folding stock version of the Ihzmash Biathlon rifle as a short range sniping rifle. The designation is SV-99.
Modern Firearms - SV-99 sniper rifle
I own a TULA TOZ-78 (also sold as the Winchester "Wildcat" model here). As far as I know, these are only commercial sale rifles. They seem to be very good shooters, but I don't know that were actually used as military training rifles.
TULA, Ihzmash and Baikal all built various target/match type rifles that may or may not have been used by military rifle teams. While many of these are advertised as 'trainers', the claim is often hard to verify.
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