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Armoury storage of bayonets?
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11-29-2016 05:07 PM
# ADS
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Stored in a steel locker like you'd use to hang clothing in. Just piled on a shelf with scabbard on, frog off and by the dozen. They had a steel bar securing setup across the doors of the lockers with padlocks. Next locker would be mags, next would be bolts, breech blocks and pistol barrels...
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Or thrown together in milk crates and kicked into the corner of the weapons vault. It really depended on who was CQ and how he ran his cages.
- Darren
1 PL West Nova Scotia Regiment 2000-2003
1 BN Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry 2003-2013
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Just like that above............. So much for those with those No9 bayonets supposedly matched/numbered at the factory for their 'Irish' Mk2 rifles. But you just can't tell 'em!
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Originally Posted by
Sentryduty
the weapons vault
We didn't have those then. I forgot about the new barracks in Wainwright...and their weapons vault on the same floor the troops lived on. Handy everything could go into a wheelbarrow and be stuffed into a safe storage.
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Contributing Member
We didn't have bayonets so no clue. Our rifles were kept in locked M-16 racks placed inside a large vault whose doors were opened maybe twice a year for weapons training and qualification. I was in the Reserves for 9 years, spent 4 months in Saudi during Desert Storm and had three years of ROTC prior to all that and I don't recall ever having a bayonet. First one I saw was being sharpened by a new transfer from active duty infantry.
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At the moment my current doctrine is a milk crate locked in a steel cabinet in the vault. Other nations likely did it differently though.
For example I suspect Mosin Nagant Rifles had the bayonet stored upside down on the rifle they were serialized to (similar to how they came out of the grease) when in the vault. Many nations took serialized parts of the firearm very seriously and the bayonet was issued as a serialized part as well for some countries. I suspect they kept the rifles and bayonets together in storage. It all depends on the nation and how they did things. Switzerland kept the serialized bayonets with the rifles on the soldiers! If the rifles were turned in after service the bayonets were placed with the rifles. The reason the vast majority of the Swiss
rifles are now mismatched for bayonets is because the bayonets were sold off separately from the rifles.
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Originally Posted by
Eaglelord17
I suspect Mosin Nagant Rifles had the bayonet stored upside down on the rifle
I believe you're right there, as I don't think a scabbard exists. They kept it attached to the rifle as if they intended to use it.
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I believe you're right there, as I don't think a scabbard exists. They kept it attached to the rifle as if they intended to use it.
Jim, The Ivan's certainly never had scabbards. but they do exist for other nations. I have a couple in my collection, I think they were Rumanian or some similar country that used the Moisin.
The Russian Cossacks had a sword Called a Shashka, this had 2 brass bands with loops on them. These loops held a Moisin Nagant Bayonet.
The Reason that Russia
never issued / had scabbards was. It encouraged the 'user' to keep in on the rifle barrel. so it was ready for 'Use', at all times!....
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Originally Posted by
tankhunter
The
Russian
Cossacks had a sword Called a Shashka, this had 2 brass bands with loops on them. These loops held a Moisin Nagant Bayonet.
I take it that was for a bare bayonet as well. I'm familiar with them and had a chance to buy one not long ago. I've always seen the rifles with bayonet fixed.
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