History of WWI Primer 074: Russian Mosin-Nagant 1891 Documentary

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  • čas přidán 9. 04. 2018
  • If you enjoy this content and want to see more, please consider supporting us at:
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    Othais and Mae delve into the story of this WWI classic. Complete with history, function, and live fire demonstration.
    C&Rsenal presents its WWI Primer series; covering the firearms of this historic conflict one at a time in honor of the centennial anniversary. Join us every other Tuesday!
    Extra help in animation from: Matthew Sessions
    InRange mud test
    • Mud Test: The WW1 & WW...
    Additional reading:
    3-ЛН ВИНТОВКА МОСИНА b
    R.N. Chumak
    Drei Linien Die Gewehre Mosin-Nagant, Band 1
    Karl-Heinz Wrobel
    Allied Rifle contracts in America
    Luke Mercaldo
    Serbian Army Weapons of Victory 1914-1918 Vol 1
    Branislav Stankovic and John P. Sheehan
    Original music provided by Melissa Hyman of The Moon and You
    www.themoonandyou.com/
    Safe range space thanks to Triana Protection
    In collaboration with The Great War
    / thegreatwar
    Additional photos thanks to Rock Island Auction House
    Ammunition data thanks to DrakeGmbH
    / drakegmbh
    Animation Music from Vector Smash
    vectorsmash.com
    Visit us at candrsenal.com

Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @DarkTheErrant
    @DarkTheErrant Před 6 lety +516

    "Obviously, I don't have enough penguins for the entire rifle." -Othais 25:25
    Best quote of the series.

    • @Illbebacc
      @Illbebacc Před 4 lety +7

      "With one penguin at the top...
      there we go."
      Man they should write books about this stuff.

    • @kitchenjail3546
      @kitchenjail3546 Před 3 lety +5

      Need some mosins to equip my weaponised assault penguins

    • @MrDmitriRavenoff
      @MrDmitriRavenoff Před 3 lety +1

      Penguins per round sounds like a Russian unit of penetration.

    • @nicoladiiorio8898
      @nicoladiiorio8898 Před rokem +6

      "so yeah no more butt loaders" -Othais 26:38

  • @BumroyV2
    @BumroyV2 Před 6 lety +218

    "You can complain all you want, it's better to know why." That's a damn good quote.

    • @grzegorzbrzeczyszykiewic3338
      @grzegorzbrzeczyszykiewic3338 Před 2 lety +1

      This is a great quote to summarize the mosin, it’s a rifle that was made to fill the hands of conscript armies comprised of millions of Russian serfs who’ve never before handled a rifle, it doesn’t matter if rifle is the best in the world if you can’t make enough for every soldier.
      Just point and aim it, and once you’re empty just run and beat them until they stop twitching , and if it breaks, just pick a new one from the pile .

  • @swiger530
    @swiger530 Před 2 lety +123

    In WWI the British brought a battle rifle, the Americans brought a target rifle, the Germans brought a hunting rifle and the Russians brought....a rifle.

    • @alexeishayya-shirokov3603
      @alexeishayya-shirokov3603 Před 6 měsíci +16

      That's all it needed to be really, for a regular infantryman at least.

    • @watchface6836
      @watchface6836 Před 5 měsíci +10

      And the Canadians brought a paperweight

    • @kingleech16
      @kingleech16 Před 4 měsíci +7

      And the Gurkhas brought really scary knives.

    • @andrewmoore7022
      @andrewmoore7022 Před měsícem +2

      And the French brought a bad rifle.

    • @kingleech16
      @kingleech16 Před měsícem +1

      @@andrewmoore7022 Zut alors! How could you say such things!? The French did not bring a bad rifle, they brought the single greatest yeeter of rifle grenades of the war!

  • @MilsurpMikeChannel
    @MilsurpMikeChannel Před 6 lety +605

    The Mosin-Nagant. The gateway drug for most milsurp collectors. It maybe one of the cheapest guns you ever buy, but one of the most expensive purchases you will make. My oldest Mosin is a 1898 Sestroryetsk 3 Line M91.

    • @MrBioniclefan1
      @MrBioniclefan1 Před 6 lety +22

      Not for me it was the Lee Enfield

    • @chefemilj
      @chefemilj Před 6 lety +19

      Milsurp Mike Channel omg no truer words were said. I'm now up to 2 rifle safes. Sure bye that hundred dollar gun.

    • @chriscary4074
      @chriscary4074 Před 6 lety +16

      My oldest and first was a gift from a relative, 1907 built '03 Springfield that survived both wars... Mosin my be the the cheapest gateway drug to MilSurp... But once you get a Mauser you will NEVER stop. I'm up to 5 now. And that's fine DIFFERENT rifles not 5 Springfield's. American, Swedish, Turkish and 2 German

    • @TheGreatBeard
      @TheGreatBeard Před 6 lety +16

      In Canada, the SKS seems to be peoples go to rifle when they get a milsurp for the first time. However the Mosin Nagant is never far behind.

    • @charlesadams1721
      @charlesadams1721 Před 6 lety +16

      Milsurp Mike Channel, if you were around firearms in he US during the 60’s, up until maybe the 1990’s you seldom, if ever saw a Mosin. I remember shooting everything from old Remington Rolling Blocks to M-14 rifle’s.
      I had a chance to buy a mint Mosin for get this $35, back in 1972. I shot it and at the time I’d rather of shot the Rolling Block.
      Now, now I’m not so sure..
      This s absolutely not proven, but from working in gun shops, the main reason why Mosin rifles became popular is due to several factors; one, the rifles were cheap as long as Russia, and others was dumping them on the market -often you could buy four Mosins for one worn out Lee-Enfields, two, as it was connected with the Soviet Union, it was one of the “bad guys” rifles, very much somewhat why WWII German weapons were in high demand (absent the sometimes high quality and 3, the Mosin achieved significant popularity with its heavy presence in some first person shooter video games.

  • @bones020694
    @bones020694 Před 6 lety +463

    "The Russian response to taking fire from Winchester repeater rifles was... hurry up."
    love it

    • @kitchenjail3546
      @kitchenjail3546 Před 3 lety +17

      Ironically, they ended up buying Winchester guns later one. And the soldiers loved those.

    • @yulusleonard985
      @yulusleonard985 Před 3 lety +5

      @@kitchenjail3546 Lol nope, those guns hated by the Russian and ended in foreign army like the Czech and Finn. You cant put scope on it, you cant prone on it and have multiple parts.

    • @Trashcansam123
      @Trashcansam123 Před 3 lety +11

      The Russians didn’t bother putting scopes on rifles until after WW1

    • @Tunkkis
      @Tunkkis Před 3 lety +6

      @@yulusleonard985 Could you not just turn the rifle to the side when recharging while printed? Sure, you'll interrupt your sight picture, but that really doesn't seem like that big of a deal breaker to me.

    • @yulusleonard985
      @yulusleonard985 Před 2 lety +1

      @Random Pickle Lol wut? M1891 is inspired from Paul Mauser works and all his works are far more simple than any John Browning works.

  • @CountArtha
    @CountArtha Před 5 lety +320

    A "line" is exactly one-tenth of an inch, and an _Arshin_ is exactly two and a half feet. In the 1700s Tsar Peter the Great wanted to switch Russia over to the Imperial system - but traditionalists objected, so he did the next-best thing and reformed Russian units to be easily converted to Imperial units.

    • @coaxill4059
      @coaxill4059 Před 4 lety +7

      What was their system before that?

    • @CountArtha
      @CountArtha Před 3 lety +42

      @@coaxill4059 The Arshin or "Russian yard" used to be the length of a man's arm from shoulder to fingertip. Obviously that's imprecise, because one peasant's arm is going to be longer than another. Peter's reforms introduced a standard length that could be measured out with tools.
      upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2a/Obsolete_Russian_units_of_length__-ru.svg/935px-Obsolete_Russian_units_of_length-__ru.svg.png

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 Před 3 lety +19

      And the only problem people had was no-one could agree on how long an inch was... That was settled with the metric inch in 1959.
      The 303 rifle is a 303 because London and Enfield couldn’t agree on the length of an inch - and that was just in England...

    • @TomasPabon
      @TomasPabon Před 3 lety +2

      Wait I was always under the impression that Russian aristocracy of the time were massive Francophiles, why not go to the metric system?

    • @theatagamer90
      @theatagamer90 Před 3 lety +26

      @@TomasPabon
      Because they were fans of the French Aristocrats. And the Aristocrats were currently being decapitated, arrested, or exiled due to the French Revolution. And with that came a sudden dislike of all things that weren't arisocratic and came out of the new French "Republic".

  • @generalwaste2062
    @generalwaste2062 Před 6 lety +1267

    "More than 1 million men without arms." Well I guess they don't need rifles then.

  • @ElfRightsActivist
    @ElfRightsActivist Před 3 lety +121

    "While they would ultimately win, they suffered extreme casualties in the process and it took longer than they expected" seems to sum up most Russian military actions over the last 200 years.

    • @quentinhoward99
      @quentinhoward99 Před 2 lety +9

      I want to agree but your name makes me hesitate.

    • @commisaryarreck3974
      @commisaryarreck3974 Před 2 lety +3

      @@quentinhoward99
      Elves deserve the right to be porked too
      Damn succubi taking all the men

    • @thomastheawesome4822
      @thomastheawesome4822 Před 2 lety +14

      This really hasn't changed as of late

    • @enzowarren9832
      @enzowarren9832 Před rokem +6

      yet again, Russia has proven this statement correct.

    • @TiberiiGrakh
      @TiberiiGrakh Před rokem +1

      Thats BS. Story about "horrendous losses" nothing but western propaganda. There are tons of fights and battles where Russian won having less men and much less casualties. But in the west everything is upside down and wrong casualties numbers wrong literally everything. Total propaganda. Its proven dozen of times when germans or french increase russian casualties like 2-3 times and everything just repeat it all the time for political propaganda.
      Great example are Napoleonic wars WW1 and ww2.
      In ww2 Russians lost less men per 1 killed german than USA, (1.3 USSR vs 1.6 USA) but in everyones mind on the west its like Russian lost gazillions and didnt care about soldiers and didnt kill much. which is just banana BS.
      EVERY single general does care abput soldiers cause noone wants lose people and stay without army,.
      Another MYTH about general winter or other excuses for europeans lost so many wars to Russians.
      After that west is malding and repeat all BS again and again and cry about exuses why russians won so many times.
      Wester (europeans) never accepted fact that Russians fought MUCH better in many cases on strategic or tactical level.
      Just suvorov is example who won like 60 battles and didnt lose a sigle one and most times had less ppl than enemy. But when you start reading western sources of that time it all complete BS everytime CNN fake news for centuries.

  • @Rinasoir
    @Rinasoir Před 6 lety +71

    My nephew is obsessed with that penguin toy. I will hear that music in my nightmares, I thank you for sparing me listening to it more.

  • @lefr33man
    @lefr33man Před 6 lety +541

    Small Arms of WWII Primer 273: German MG42 (7 hours 43 minutes)

    • @Boreas74
      @Boreas74 Před 6 lety +43

      We can only hope :)

    • @b.griffin317
      @b.griffin317 Před 6 lety +55

      since the '42 is based on '34, I can only imagine how long the '34 video would be in that case.

    • @richarddixon7276
      @richarddixon7276 Před 6 lety +7

      I can hardly wait !

    • @LoneWolf051
      @LoneWolf051 Před 6 lety +12

      I cant wait for the Garand

    • @charlesadams1721
      @charlesadams1721 Před 6 lety +2

      b. griffin - one week? I mean a FULL week.

  • @dundschannel
    @dundschannel Před 6 lety +239

    This channel receives waaaay too little attention for the quality It delivers.

  • @grayflaneur4854
    @grayflaneur4854 Před 6 lety +48

    I have quite a few Mosins including a sniper and Finnish variants. I guess I have been very fortunate as they all have parts that match (with Finnish being different or forced). The bolts all function like you would expect and all the Russian / Soviet versions have been through arsenal refurbishment. But, they function well whether they are cold or hot. They are durable and shoot good groups. The Finnish shoot really good groups. I haven't had the trouble that others have had, but then my Russian / Soviet versions were all made before WW2 or after. I know wartime production involved corners to be cut. To me, the bolts are like simple manual transmissions in a car, clunky and unrefined, but they work. Mauser, Enfield, Mannlicher, and Schmit Rubin (to name a few) all have better engineered bolts and receivers, but the rugged simplicity and basic functionality is what makes the Mosin Nagant what it is; a basic battle rifle that will function whether it's in the arctic or the tropics. I admire the weapon and it's design, but I really admire those other rifles I mentioned, too. It's not a competition for me, but all these rifles represent interesting history and a cool shooting experience.

  • @Khanclansith
    @Khanclansith Před 6 lety +460

    "no more butt loading for the Russians.". -Othais

    • @matthewdoeskoolstuff44
      @matthewdoeskoolstuff44 Před 6 lety +8

      Lmao

    • @ZGryphon
      @ZGryphon Před 6 lety +35

      "There's a lot going on back here."

    • @ekscalybur
      @ekscalybur Před 6 lety +26

      "View all 3 replies"
      *clicks button, sees 2 replies*
      You still suck CZcams.

    • @-Honeybee
      @-Honeybee Před 5 lety +4

      This is truly great content.

    • @jackandersen1262
      @jackandersen1262 Před 5 lety +3

      Eks calybur that’s usually the result of a deleted comment.

  • @JenniferinIllinois
    @JenniferinIllinois Před 6 lety +1295

    Describing Russian rifle technology with penguins. CZcams GOLD!!!!

    • @BigMek456
      @BigMek456 Před 6 lety +10

      Oh youre on CZcams as well? Cool

    • @C0MR4D3C0WB0Y
      @C0MR4D3C0WB0Y Před 6 lety +9

      Little Jenny this video has been rated family friendly by CZcams!

    • @91chevys10
      @91chevys10 Před 6 lety +17

      26:24 needs to be a GIF. Who's able to do it?

    • @Edax_Royeaux
      @Edax_Royeaux Před 6 lety +7

      For a second, I had to check if this was the April Fools episode when I saw that.

    • @kostas1x2
      @kostas1x2 Před 6 lety +9

      Love the penguins. I used to own this ladder toy 34 years ago.

  • @balljointfd3s
    @balljointfd3s Před 2 lety +32

    Combat Footage from Russia 2022 in Ukraine, they are using this for rear guard duty. I also saw a video of the Ukranian Army shooting a Maxim (maybe Vickers) but definitely Water cooled Maxim, cloth belt and all. WW1 weapons are being used TODAY!!!

    • @CipiRipi-in7df
      @CipiRipi-in7df Před 8 měsíci +3

      Those MNs used in Ukraine are a newer breed (M91/30 and M91/48 variant). They were all WW2 surplus.
      That MG was a Maxim Sokolov MG, another WW2 surplus.

    • @ticket2space
      @ticket2space Před 18 dny

      Man theres some old stuff over there right now being fielded. You seen the dual Maxims or dual Vickers or whatever it was? They're setting 2 up on a mount with a red dot and running them both at once. I've heard of a quad mount but not seen it with my own eyes. You think those guys would've ever imagined their weapons would still be being deployed in today's day and age? Especially with modern weapons technology?

  • @Bigtjr-mj8op
    @Bigtjr-mj8op Před 2 lety +19

    Over summer I managed an absolute score. A buddy said he had a mosin he was thinking of sale. Sight unseen I offered him my school laptop that I got when I graduated, it was a like $200 laptop. I offered it to him as trade, cause I was like oh a mosin, they’re cheap. Dude decided to accept offer and I finally got to see the rifle. Turns out it was a 1895 Finish Mosin.

    • @alexeishayya-shirokov3603
      @alexeishayya-shirokov3603 Před 6 měsíci +1

      1895? Wasn't Finnland a part of the Russian empire at the time?

    • @professionalmoron2388
      @professionalmoron2388 Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​@@alexeishayya-shirokov3603The Finnish never made mosins they bought or captured them from other countries so the rifle was made in 1895 before the finns got it

  • @marinthecreator
    @marinthecreator Před 6 lety +113

    24:21 A weapon to surpass metal gear

  • @danielhyson6079
    @danielhyson6079 Před 6 lety +89

    My God, the penguins are amazing! A weapon to end all wars!

    • @MaxwellAerialPhotography
      @MaxwellAerialPhotography Před 6 lety +6

      a weapon to surpass metal gear

    • @chriscary4074
      @chriscary4074 Před 6 lety +5

      those penguins are WMD's
      Weapons of mass distraction!!!

    • @davidbrennan660
      @davidbrennan660 Před 5 lety +3

      No penguins were harmed in the filming of this historical document....... I still want to hear that tune... .

    • @quentinhoward99
      @quentinhoward99 Před 2 lety

      Have you seen the penguin from Wallace and Gromit? That thing puts terror into the heart of men.

  • @reddevilparatrooper
    @reddevilparatrooper Před 6 lety +108

    American soldiers from the post WWI Russia Expedition Forces around June1918 till March 1920 were armed with these rifles when they landed in Russia. The Minnesota and Michigan National Guard infantry regiments had more combat time than the average American combat divisions in Western Europe and they were armed with the Mosin-Nagant 1891s. They fought against the Russian Communist Bolsheviks in Archangel Russia guarding the railways along with White Russian and other Allied troops. This was a truly forgotten war that majority of Americans did not know about. The American soldiers were very unhappy not to be armed with their favorite M1903s or their M1917s which they had been trained on. The British were in command over all along with a committee of officers from nations like France, and Japan. The Allied troops were armed with their nation's service rifles but the Americans were forced to use the Mosin-Nagants. The American infantrymen made the rifles work and held their own during combat operations. The only good thing was ammunition resupply was not a problem because they had tons of Russian ammunition and got them off the dead Bolsheviks that they killed in combat. The Americans were better trained in this type of combat because it was frontier style fighting that American soldiers have done in the late 1800s and before. American soldiers were stationed in block houses along the railways with good defensive positions and did patrol around their perimeters and along the tracks. The Michigan and Minnesota Guardsmen nearly half of them were hunters and woodsmen. Some were Russian born immigrants or Finns who knew the Russian language in their ranks allowed them to fight on almost even terms. Aggressive reconnaissance patrolling done by American soldiers helped very much catching Bolshevik patrols by ambush to alert their positions and mount counter attacks. The Bolsheviks never fought troops like the Americans who were good marksmen and using American Indian style tactics despite being outnumbered and fighting in the forests of Siberia. Some American outpost were wiped out due to artillery and overwhelmed with massive waves of Red infantry attacking them. The US troops were pulled out when the Allies decided that trying to save the White Russians was hopeless and the Allies pulled out in 1920. American soldiers fought well with their Russian rifles issued to them despite their deficiencies and held their own in combat. Very interesting but forgotten part of American military history.

    • @davidbriggs264
      @davidbriggs264 Před 6 lety +18

      Sorry, but while your piece may contain a lot of actual history, you've made a big mistake. Three American Regiments were sent to Russia in 1917/1918. The Regular Army 23rd (?) and 31st from Hawaii were sent (literally) to Siberia to help the Czech's get home, and theoretically back into the fight. The other Regiment was the 339th Infantry Regiment of the 85th Division, and while it was given the nickname of Detroit's Own, it was a National Army (the World War One version of the modern Army Reserve) Division, and therefore Regiment, which means that the bulk of the Division was composed initially of draftees from Michigan. To the best of my knowledge, no National Guard personnel were sent to Russia, and especially from Minnesota.

    • @reddevilparatrooper
      @reddevilparatrooper Před 6 lety +7

      David Briggs=Thank you for your correction. I remember being at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii the 27th INF "Wofhounds" which is part of the 25th Infantry Division. The 31st INF "Polar Bears" which was in the Philippines as the only American regiment in the Philippine Division before WWII. You have a better grasp of this really unknown part of American military involvement. Once again thanks.

    • @davidbriggs264
      @davidbriggs264 Před 6 lety +8

      Red Devil, You are right in that it was the 27th, and not the 23rd Infantry Regiment that was sent to Siberia. The 23rd was actually in France with the 2nd Infantry Division. And by the way, some former National Guard personnel MAY have actually found their way to Russia with the 339th, but those would have been (for the most part) former National Guard Enlisted Personnel who received commissions, or served as senior NCO's, since the 339th needed at least a few NCOs initially. But those few (if any) National Guard personnel who found their way to Russia were no longer with their old National Guard unit.

    • @user-do7xs2mj1b
      @user-do7xs2mj1b Před 5 lety +10

      Yes, we remember your atrocities against the civilian population.

    • @Legitpenguins99
      @Legitpenguins99 Před 5 lety +20

      @@user-do7xs2mj1b ok, I'll bite.
      And we all remember your close to 40 year occupation of Germany, Hungary, Austria, Romania, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria, etc. Oh don't forget what "you" did to Poland. Compared to what, like 1 rumor you heard?

  • @Body_Farm
    @Body_Farm Před 3 lety +11

    The knowledge this man possesses and how he delivers the info is unreal, thank you good Sir.

  • @maewinchester2030
    @maewinchester2030 Před 6 lety +643

    And here I was worried the penguins wouldn't be a hit...

    • @dennisdenuto
      @dennisdenuto Před 6 lety +20

      Even my wife laughed twice this episode and she is "Meh" about guns

    • @jankaas4504
      @jankaas4504 Před 6 lety +1

      No you didnt

    • @troubledturtle2332
      @troubledturtle2332 Před 6 lety +15

      I think the penguins would make a great t- shirt idea.

    • @chefemilj
      @chefemilj Před 6 lety +9

      My 16 year old couldn't stop lapping... couldn't believe what he was seeing. But he understood everything... best of the best

    • @AnimeSunglasses
      @AnimeSunglasses Před 4 lety +4

      @@troubledturtle2332 I second the request for a penguin bullet shirt!

  • @themigraineshow
    @themigraineshow Před 6 lety +31

    Penguins??? I love this show. This is why history teachers like Othias shouldn't be potentially censored or shut down by CZcams. Like the opening of Tales of the Gun said, The gun has played a critical role in history. An invention which has been praised and denounced, served hero and villain alike.
    Villains or the deeds of villains shouldn't be allowed to control how history is taught. Keep up the great work Othias, Mae, and the whole C&Rsenal crew.

  • @richarddixon7276
    @richarddixon7276 Před 6 lety +34

    Awesome as Always ! You Should have have 740.000 subscribers by now , Othias & Mae are excellent Teachers , this has to be one of the most interesting episode's yet and deserved every minute I spent watching it (It took Me 3 days as I have no internet at home and have to watch at work during My breaks) these Folk work So hard for our enrichment , the whole team deserve more praise than I am capable .
    Thanks All at C&R .

  • @ronalddunne3413
    @ronalddunne3413 Před 3 lety +9

    Mae, a Nagant, and "God Save The Tsar".... gotta love it! The first MN I fired (or saw) was a Chinese-made Type 53 carbine in N. Vietnamese/Viet Cong service, with the frog-sticker folding bayonet. I think it was a Chinese copy of the Soviet M44. Many years ago. Impressive fireball!
    As you pointed out, the Mosin may not be one's FAVORITE rifle, but it is a sturdy, reliable rifle and would definitely do in a pinch!

  • @ramjb
    @ramjb Před 6 lety +285

    In my personal opinion about the quality of the weapon, yes, it might have been inferior in handling to other rifles of the time, but seeing how that was because of design compromises to make the rifle easy to make...well if you are forced to mobilize an army that can be as large as the Russian army was, you demanded something easy and cheap to build. That never comes without sacrifices and that the Mosin-Nagant did make those sacrifices shouldn't really detract that much from the rifle itself.
    The question always remains wether is better to have 3.500.000 Rifles that work and fire and are reliable, even if they are inferior in handling to other nations' rifles...or to have only half of that number that work beautifully. For a small country it's obvious it's the latter. For Russia?....for russia it's all about making it as simple as easy to make as possible to churn it in as big numbers as possible.
    For me is clear the Mosin-Nagant did what it was supposed to do and had the characteristics that Russia demanded out of the rifle - not all of them have to make for a splendid rifle ,but better to have a mountain of so-so rifles than few very good rifles (and much better than no rifle at all).
    So I still like the weapon for what it was. It served in two different world wars (different versions but even then), so noone can say that it didn't do what it was supposed to do. Considering the ammount of firearms out there that didn't do exactly that, I'd still rate the Mosin-Nagant as one of the all-time great rifles, even if imperfect and with some significant issues.
    And bloody heck, guys. 1 hour 40 minutes of a spectacular lesson on firearms and history. You're one of the best treasures CZcams has to offer nowadays. SPLENDID JOB!.

    • @13FRAMER
      @13FRAMER Před 6 lety +6

      in Russia its called Mosin.

    • @phileas007
      @phileas007 Před 6 lety +11

      Well, I've got one and my conclusion is slightly different.
      The rifle itself is surprisingly awesome, but the main problem is not the rail, but rather the cocking-piece and the usage of rimmed ammo.
      I've tuned my bolt (and done a trigger job, but that's unrelated) to the point where it really runs smoothly, but that required fiddling with the geometry of the cocking piece and some hours of work. Not the kind of effort that you would do for a cheap mass-produced piece of crap.
      The same design, if produced to the machining standards of German or Japanese stuff and perhaps allowed some more refinement and improvement of the details would not be in any way inferior to other guns. It's really the fit and finish that ruin it.

    • @aronk8810
      @aronk8810 Před 6 lety +16

      The thing is that the design itself is bad. Split-bridge receiver? The location of the bolt handle? Feed control? Single-stack magazine? The Mosin can be understood within the context of “we need to arm millions of poorly-trained peasants cheaply”, but that’s it. As for non-Russian manufacture Mosins, there was a large batch manufactured here in the US by Remington and at least one other company. They’re still bad.

    • @deepbludreams
      @deepbludreams Před 6 lety +8

      Italians had the same problem, they made the Carcano, and that rifle is better then a Mosin.

    • @USSEnterpriseA1701
      @USSEnterpriseA1701 Před 6 lety +17

      We must also remember, this is an older design than many of the rifles it would end up facing, and was meant to compete with the likes of the Gew 88, 86 Lebel, and the older straight-pull Mannlichers. There is something to be said for sticking with something that you know how to make and can make a boat-load of when you have to deal with the scale of the Russian military. I'm actually pretty fond of the Mosin as a shooter and the action is pretty easy to deal with via the proper application of lubricants (specifically putting lithium grease on the cam surface that cocks the striker, does wonders for even the worst of the stiff bolts).

  • @britishmuzzleloaders
    @britishmuzzleloaders Před 6 lety +322

    Zzz-click, zzzz-click, zzz-click, zzz-click,....... WEEEEEEEEEEEE!!! What rifle was this episode about?...... Really though.... great work!

  • @tomclark9895
    @tomclark9895 Před 6 lety +11

    This episode was a C&Rsenal masterpiece. You took a weapon with a complicated and subtle history and really did it justice. I don't know how you got to be so good at doing this, but please keep doing it.

  • @knightofavalon86
    @knightofavalon86 Před 4 lety +18

    "Obviously I don't have enough penguins for the entire rifle."
    PLEASE put this on a t shirt. Preferably with a bunch of tiny penguins trying to lift a Mosin.

    • @kitchenjail3546
      @kitchenjail3546 Před 3 lety +1

      Seconded, we all like some Weaponised Assault Penguins

  • @NardoVogt
    @NardoVogt Před 6 lety +126

    Penguins!?! This show just became legendary.

  • @chsims7032
    @chsims7032 Před 6 lety +165

    Please, for the love of God, whatever you do, include more of those penguins into the episodes, even if they're completely unrelated to the subject at hand.

  • @gungho1345
    @gungho1345 Před 2 lety +8

    Took my grandfather's 1903 Springfield and shot it side by side with my buddy's Mosin. It was like putting a Porsche against a Volkswagen in a drag race. Mae saying you have to work the Mosin bolt like it owes you money is spot on.

  • @Supatrader
    @Supatrader Před 2 lety +27

    Kudos for the "three liner". In Russia nobody knows this as Mosin, but everyone knows what a three-liner is

    • @alexeishayya-shirokov3603
      @alexeishayya-shirokov3603 Před 7 měsíci +5

      Not really, they call it "Vintovka Mosina". It's Nagant that they never mention 😂

    • @sparkyfromel
      @sparkyfromel Před 24 dny

      The Soviets wanted a new rifle , but it had been pushed back , the tanks and planes were more urgent
      When the SVT 38 was rejected by the Army , Stalin quipped " Well we are stuck with the old 3 lines for a bit longer "
      then the war made any rifle a critical need
      P.S the SVT slowly solved it's fault , the model 40 was way better

  • @venturestheshadows6841
    @venturestheshadows6841 Před 6 lety +13

    from Japan! this bolt action rifle is my favorite one! Thank you for this video!

  • @JesusChrist8451
    @JesusChrist8451 Před 6 lety +59

    The mosin nagant is like a cute coworker. Nice lines... a bit unpredictable... you could probably take it out and have a lot of fun, but you've heard the stories... and you know that in the end you won't want to be settling down with it.

    • @JesusChrist8451
      @JesusChrist8451 Před 6 lety +10

      "There we go... red penguin, that's what we want. Throw it on your back and go to war.".... best training film ever.

    • @g.55centaurosimp18
      @g.55centaurosimp18 Před 6 lety +13

      Well, you stick with it long enough and you get a Kalashnikov.
      Good trade in my book.

    • @a-1tetropilovstava822
      @a-1tetropilovstava822 Před 5 lety +1

      Unless you're "Man of Steel".

    • @user-tq4fw9mv2f
      @user-tq4fw9mv2f Před 5 lety +2

      JESUS RUSSIAN LAND HOLY AGAIN

    • @xmm-cf5eg
      @xmm-cf5eg Před 4 lety +5

      I'd take the Mosin over Ms. Mauser, at least Mosin doesn't talk on and on about how "she's the greatest rifle ever made" every time you stop to chat.

  • @douglaskillock3537
    @douglaskillock3537 Před měsícem +1

    The penguin magazine system is undoubtedly the most radical concept I've seen in this or any other firearm. As Mark might put it, Outstanding!

  • @andrewrittscher168
    @andrewrittscher168 Před 6 lety +9

    Wow, I sort of feel like I just experienced the development of the Mosin in real time. Excellent, thanks for you and your crew's hard work.

  • @ISKTR114
    @ISKTR114 Před 6 lety +43

    The time has come, and so have I.

  • @GeneralJackRipper
    @GeneralJackRipper Před 6 lety +40

    Being a Patron, I see these a week early, so I go through this process:
    > "New C&Rsenal! Awesome!"
    > "Oh, wait, I've already seen this one, darn."
    > "Screw it, I'll watch it again anyway!"

    • @Candrsenal
      @Candrsenal  Před 6 lety +5

      Wait what? We release to Patreon like 10 minutes early...

    • @GeneralJackRipper
      @GeneralJackRipper Před 6 lety +6

      You know what? I got this confused with the special over on The Great War.
      I guess things all run together after a while. Whoops.

    • @richarddixon7276
      @richarddixon7276 Před 6 lety +1

      I would watch it again if I had Time .

  • @naranbattseren6694
    @naranbattseren6694 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you for your informative video. I am a Mongolian. From the age of 16 I started to use mosin. At that time, there weren't many western rifles in Mongolia. I was so amazed to see exit wound of this bullet and its long range capabilities. Many times I have seen exit wound of 20 cms in diameter. The most amazing thing I have ever seen was my uncle used to hit animals at the range of 800-1000 meters with mosin without scope. I have also seen some hunters shoot with mosin like semi-auto rifles. They reload it unbelievable fast. I personally shoot really fast and I never seen cartridges jams. Army cartridges rapture very often, but it never jammed in the chamber. I agree that mosin too heave and long and it's bolt is hard to pull.

  • @danielhyson6079
    @danielhyson6079 Před 6 lety +10

    Mae, I'm so sorry about what you will have to go through with the mosin carbine in order for us to get the next episode. Thank you for your valiant service in the name of the channel. We shall never forget your dedication and determination in order for us to have these glorious videos.

  • @ComiCBoY000
    @ComiCBoY000 Před 6 lety +20

    I collect mosins. My absolute favorite because there are so many makes and models. Not my favorite shooter but my favorite all the same.

    • @troubledturtle2332
      @troubledturtle2332 Před 6 lety +6

      I know other rifles are hands down better than the Mosin, but I still even with all its shortcomings, I still have a soft spot for the rifle.

    • @anthonyhayes1267
      @anthonyhayes1267 Před 5 lety +2

      In your opinion, which variant of the moist nugget is the best quality?

    • @supersarge2477
      @supersarge2477 Před 4 lety

      @@anthonyhayes1267 If you want best quality, I suggest trying to find a PU sniper variant. They're rarer and more expensive, but very nice for mosins.

    • @xmm-cf5eg
      @xmm-cf5eg Před 4 lety +1

      I love most surplus ww1-ww2 rifles, I just hate obsessive Mauser fans. (Looking at you Alex, of TFB, I'll never respect folks like him.)
      Mosin guys are usually easy to get along with in my experience, but someone will surely say I'm biased, oh well.
      If I was going for a "special" mosin, I'd buy a Tula Arsenal made one. My Izhevsk's suit me fine, that's just me though.

    • @xmm-cf5eg
      @xmm-cf5eg Před 4 lety +1

      I love most surplus ww1-ww2 rifles, I just hate obsessive Mauser fans. (Looking at you Alex, of TFB, I'll never respect folks like him.)
      Mosin guys are usually easy to get along with in my experience, but someone will surely say I'm biased, oh well.
      If I was going for a "special" mosin, I'd buy a Tula Arsenal made one. My Izhevsk's suit me fine, that's just me though.

  • @SpicyRub
    @SpicyRub Před 6 lety +98

    Finally you couldn't run forever

  • @benjaminblumberg1645
    @benjaminblumberg1645 Před 2 lety +5

    Part of the reason for the rubbery looseness of the Mosin bolt probably lies in the bitter cold of the Russian winter. Russians know that everything shrinks and seizes in the winter, so a little extra play is generally a good idea.

    • @alexeishayya-shirokov3603
      @alexeishayya-shirokov3603 Před 7 měsíci +1

      It can also hit a scorching +40 Celsius in the summer in some parts of the country, namely in Volgograd (ex. Stalingrad) where it's basically 6 months of bitter cold and 6 months of scorching heat.
      Now just imagine what this could do to any piece of metal, let alone a rifle bolt.

  • @d-cat8198
    @d-cat8198 Před 6 lety +4

    Brilliant! I waited on this one until I had time to really pay attention. The work you are doing here is truly amazing. Your channel is better than anything t.v. Has to offer. I just want to say that this is finally the first milsurp rifle that Mae hasn't smiled through firing. If that doesn't endear this rifle to history then I don't know what does. Please don't stop...love your films!

  • @Khalrua
    @Khalrua Před 6 lety +15

    Always a great day when a C&Rsenal Primer comes out!

  • @535tony
    @535tony Před 4 lety +6

    What I liked most about the Mosin is that I got three of them for $100. These were Chinese M53's but still a high power Rifle for cheap. I also got two Finnish M28's for $40 each. They aren't that cheap anymore though.

  • @kirkmooneyham
    @kirkmooneyham Před 2 lety +1

    I'm glad they didn't take you guys down, and that you were able to stay afloat monetarily to continue the channel.
    I learned a LOT about the history of the Mosin-Nagant, so thank you.

  • @calvinmaestro3400
    @calvinmaestro3400 Před 2 lety +1

    I must be the luckiest Mosin Nagant owner in the world: Mine was made in 1928. Wood and metal in superb condition.. My bolt and trigger work fine, even on par with my Savage Axis and TC Compass modern rifles. As far as the hand rest placement, put on three layers of wool clothing and then your thickest and warmest winter coat. Then, take the Mosin and put it up to your shoulder. I live in upper Michigan and it has snowed in May. And I have shot this rifle in very cold weather. No lock ups ever. Deadly accurate at man sized targets at 200 yards. Oh, yes. I use modern, high quality lubricant and keep it meticulously clean. That's the secret. Love your video. Love May!

  • @wayneigoe6722
    @wayneigoe6722 Před 5 lety +9

    Classic joke about the Mosin Nagat:
    M16 - Butt melts under the magnifying glass.
    AK-47 - Under the magnifying glass you can still consider it working with Vietnamese mud instead of grease.
    Mosin Nagat - Under the magnifying glass you can see the blood-soaked tree it came from
    M16 - It breaks when dirty.
    AK-47 - Works when dirty.
    Mosin Nagat- There was not a clean moment when it entered the hands of troops in 1892.
    M16 - Hundreds of moving parts fastened by dozens of bolts and screws.
    AK-47 - A couple dozen moving parts held by a handful of rivets and the ugly seams of a drunken Russian welder.
    Mosin Nagat - Three moving parts, two screws.
    M16 - You're more likely to die than you will break this dashing rifle in hand-to-hand combat.
    AK-47 - Your machine can be well fought in hand-to-hand.
    Mosin Nagat - Your rifle is a classy spear with the ability to shoot.
    M16 - If the bug breaks, you take the rifle to the factory under warranty.
    AK-47- If the bug breaks, you buy a new one.
    Mosin Nagat - If the bug breaks, you spin it a couple of turns further into the bolt.
    M16 - More difficult to manufacture than some aircraft.
    AK-47 - Used by countries that do not have money for airplanes.
    Mosin Nagat - Used to shoot down the aircraft.
    M16 - Favorite drink of the owner - whiskey.
    AK-47 - Favorite drink of the owner - vodka.
    Mosin Nagat- Favorite drink of the owner - brake fluid, fused on a frozen scrap.
    M16 - Makes a small hole, neat according to the Geneva Convention.
    AK-47 - Makes a big hole, sometimes tears off limbs, does not comply with the Geneva Convention.
    Mosin Nagat - One of the reasons for the creation of the Geneva Convention.
    M16 - Excellent shooting small rodents.
    AK-47 - Excellent shooting enemies of the motherland.
    Mosin Nagat- Excellent shooting through light armor.
    M16 - Once in the river, it stops working.
    AK-47 - Once in the river, it still shoots.
    Mosin Nagat - Once in the river, it’s usually used as an oar.
    M16 - Rifle-attached grenade launcher. heavy, but can put a grenade in the window for 200 meters.
    AK-47 - If anything, you can throw a grenade from the rifle into the window with your hand.
    Mosin Nagat- What grenade? Just go through the wall, the cartridge punches almost a meter of brick.
    M16 - You can put on a muffler, and small cartridge does not give much noise.
    AK-47 - In principle, you can put a on muffler, but it's better just to press enemies to the ground with continuous fire.
    Mosin Nagat - What the fuck is the point of a muffler when after the first shot everything is deaf anyway?
    M16 - The Weapons of Attack.
    AK-47 - The Weapons of Defense.
    Mosin Nagat - The Weapons of Victory!!!

  • @pyssysankar1
    @pyssysankar1 Před 6 lety +37

    Some of those receivers still serve in Finnish defence forces as sniper rifles (7.62 tkiv 85)

    • @frankdamsy9715
      @frankdamsy9715 Před 6 lety +8

      Ah yes the 7.62x53mm. No i did not type that in wrong

    • @TheWolfElder
      @TheWolfElder Před 6 lety +2

      I have a Finnish M1891 :)

    • @xmm-cf5eg
      @xmm-cf5eg Před 4 lety +5

      Idiots keep trying to correct me on if Finnish 7.62x53mm exists or not, "clearly you mean 54R."
      The argument always makes me laugh.

  • @NitroTom91
    @NitroTom91 Před 2 lety +2

    As a German Mosin "fanboy" who will most likely never see one in real life: Thank you for this video! I'd love to have a carbine one *.*

    • @aaronluna4341
      @aaronluna4341 Před 2 lety

      Their pretty sweet. My first rifle was a Mosin. 147 USD, Feels heavy in the hand, recoil is minimal,

  • @IMfromNYCity
    @IMfromNYCity Před 6 lety +78

    The Mosin-Nagant is really about a gun's 40-year long comeback story. It's about a rifle that suffered its first defeat against Arisaka, got decimated by Mauser, and then nearly destroyed itself in a series of existential crises. After a long recovery (but with a more totalitarian outlook), Mosin tried to drunkenly quarrel with its Finnish cousin, but got injured so badly that it gave Mauser an opportunity to annihilate Mosin. But the Russian rifle held on and despite its opponent's superiority, managed to turn the tide and conquer the German rifle's homeland. And then Mosin returned to his original adversary, Arisaka, and then defeated it in a month. (Of course, Arisaka was just recently crippled from its fight against Hanyang, Springfield, and Lee-Enfield)

    • @mmouse1886
      @mmouse1886 Před 6 lety +4

      I'd say that the Mauser wasn't the same as before. That Mauser lacked grace and discipline a weapon of war yes but just as easily used for other things in war that aren't shooting at soldiers

    • @kevinsharpe9716
      @kevinsharpe9716 Před 5 lety +4

      Somebody make a movie about that!

    • @23GreyFox
      @23GreyFox Před 5 lety

      @@mmouse1886 Like any other rifle?

    • @mmouse1886
      @mmouse1886 Před 5 lety +1

      @@23GreyFox I was implying the Difference between the Gewehr 98 and the Kar98k, o top of that most Mauser Rifles where Hunting rifles, not purpose built military Rifles

    • @23GreyFox
      @23GreyFox Před 5 lety

      @@mmouse1886 If you say so...

  • @cannonfodder4376
    @cannonfodder4376 Před 6 lety +80

    GOD DAMNIT!!! I have to sleep! I will see this tomorrow. A wonderful birthday video for me though. :D

    • @MWD1234567
      @MWD1234567 Před 6 lety +5

      Sleep is massively over-rated...they finally got to the Mosin-Nagant! Which is more important to you? ;-)

    • @danielhyson6079
      @danielhyson6079 Před 6 lety +4

      Happy Birthday! The team got a pretty cool gift

    • @Khanclansith
      @Khanclansith Před 6 lety +5

      Mosin Birthday to you! May bear lick you! Yes I had vodka

    • @stephen9869
      @stephen9869 Před 6 lety +4

      Happy Birthday :-)

    • @Candrsenal
      @Candrsenal  Před 6 lety +7

      Happy Birthday

  • @ludditeneaderthal
    @ludditeneaderthal Před 6 lety +78

    (in best yakov smirnov voice impersonation) in russian army, semi-pistol grip unnecessary... hand is frozen to wrist of stock

    • @cptreech
      @cptreech Před 6 lety +20

      In Punishment Battalion we nail hand to stock.

    • @tangero3462
      @tangero3462 Před 6 lety +4

      cptreech kinky.....

  • @rediius
    @rediius Před 6 lety

    I have yearned for this episode since subscribing and was not disappointed. Thank you for the 102 minutes of gold.

  • @armedtexan8373
    @armedtexan8373 Před 6 lety +1

    Alway love the history behind the guns. Thank you and keep up the good work and research!

  • @shig357
    @shig357 Před 6 lety +31

    My body and 55 gal drum of cosmoline is ready.

    • @toptenjc3373
      @toptenjc3373 Před 4 lety +4

      7.62 x 54 r don’t care what is in front of it, and it will win regardless what’s in front of it ya know

  • @gokuss15
    @gokuss15 Před 6 lety +260

    Finally, the moist nugget, /k/ommandos rejoice.

    • @KentAllard
      @KentAllard Před 6 lety +11

      Josh Callejas AVE NEX ALEA

    • @littlegrabbiZZ9PZA
      @littlegrabbiZZ9PZA Před 6 lety +17

      Kent Allard All glory to the Murdercube!

    • @Rikkou511
      @Rikkou511 Před 6 lety +16

      I'm still lurking in various threads to see if othais will grace us with his literal shitposts.

    • @lefr33man
      @lefr33man Před 6 lety +19

      +Rikkou511 Isn't there a video of him mocking /k/ommandos "jerking off to animu" while he himelf was "fingerfucking hot guns"?

    • @Rikkou511
      @Rikkou511 Před 6 lety +10

      Uh... Proabbly. He does like to tease with his unlisted videos. Such as the one where he shows mae the thread about them.

  • @johnstevens1575
    @johnstevens1575 Před 3 lety

    Everytime I see the rifles in the episode and in the background I am filled with envy.
    Thanks for posting this and increasing our knowledge and appreciation of firearms history.

  • @scottpreston5074
    @scottpreston5074 Před 3 lety +2

    Great technological history lesson, as always. It's important to keep this educational show on.

  • @gaw5024
    @gaw5024 Před 6 lety +16

    This stresses to me how lucky I was that my first centerfire was a commercial 1898 Mauser with a set trigger.

  • @a-1tetropilovstava822
    @a-1tetropilovstava822 Před 6 lety +12

    @24:57 best mechanic explanation i ever had

  • @ronalddunne3413
    @ronalddunne3413 Před rokem +1

    In case I forgot to mention it, another excellent posting... very informative history lesson and very entertaining as well. Merry Christmas 2022, and Happy Yuletide to you and Mae!❄

  • @ericstephenson9038
    @ericstephenson9038 Před 2 lety

    Thank you othias and mae for making excellent(even on 3rd rewatch) content

  • @mattorama
    @mattorama Před 6 lety +4

    You're almost at 100K! Congratulations!

  • @smittie1911
    @smittie1911 Před 6 lety +8

    I own this gun for 2 reasons. 1 it is fun to shoot. And if you can get proficient with the crappy bolt action and a long creepy trigger pull, you will be halfway decent with any other gun. And 2, the history the same reason I own flintlocks. So I can get appreciation for what the people who went to war before me worked with.

    • @wierdalien1
      @wierdalien1 Před 6 lety

      smittie1911 shooting flintlocks well will make you a better shooter

    • @smittie1911
      @smittie1911 Před 6 lety

      Very true! But Flint Locks are pretty hard to shoot past 200 yards though.

    • @wierdalien1
      @wierdalien1 Před 6 lety

      smittie1911 oh yeah but why would shoot that far with one?

  • @ave80cm
    @ave80cm Před 4 lety

    you guys are doing a great job! Pleasure to watch.

  • @joenoffsinger6376
    @joenoffsinger6376 Před 3 lety

    Oh so nice. My second 1+ hours video with Othais and Mae and loving it.

  • @DillonX-xg7cy
    @DillonX-xg7cy Před 4 lety +4

    I have a 1942 surplus 91/30 with all matching numbers and even bayonet. And at 100 yards I can hit 1 inch groups with open sights. I love my mosin, I thought the bolt was okay considering when it was made, but then I got my 1919 1903 Springfield and realized that...yeah...the mosin bolt leaves a lot to be desired lol. But I still love shooting it.

  • @joelwalmsley7217
    @joelwalmsley7217 Před 6 lety +5

    This is the episode that convinced me to become a paetron. I've been enjoying your content for a while now and I can't remember a single ad before, during or after one of your videos. The depth and extent of research done by the team is not to be taken for granted. Yt being a private company can flick this channel without providing rhyme or reason. I love the way Othias explains how this feature is different to the ones before in a manner of a good friend telling you about his new toy. It's less like a tutorial and more like a Saturday arvo over a beer. A then we get to play with the new toy with Mae, who always has a shit eating grin after firing! The T-Gewer in particular! My only complaint is that the videos are too long to wait for but Im also excited when they drop knowing they are delivered by people who's options I respect.

    • @Candrsenal
      @Candrsenal  Před 6 lety +4

      We appreciate the support. Our patrons allow us to produce this shiw fkr the world

    • @richarddixon7276
      @richarddixon7276 Před 6 lety

      Totally agree.

    • @tirdad4026
      @tirdad4026 Před 2 lety

      @@Candrsenal Please enable Persian subtitles for all your programs

  • @olecanole8596
    @olecanole8596 Před 4 lety

    You guys are great, very knowledgeable. Love the Primer series.

  • @victorkaren2393
    @victorkaren2393 Před 4 lety

    Probably the best video about this rifle I have seen. First time watching the channel and was so impressed that I subscribed and plan to check out your other videos.

  • @611_hornet5
    @611_hornet5 Před 6 lety +56

    The Nugget finally has it's video, praise the /k/ube.

  • @Komnenos1234
    @Komnenos1234 Před 2 lety +4

    I love the Mosin almost as much as the Lee Enfield. Really underrated precision, mine shoots fantastic groups.

    • @RhodokTribesman
      @RhodokTribesman Před 2 lety

      Really depends on luck of the draw. Mine can shoot 3-4 moa usually, but Ive heard about 5s, 6s, and 2s

  • @biologicalengineoflove6851

    Penguin genius! Beautiful explanation, awesome comprehensive episode. Thanks!

  • @marko11kram
    @marko11kram Před 3 lety

    we are starving!!! we need more like this!!!!
    I'm rewatching your old in depth stuff, but am starving for new!

  • @1917Enfield
    @1917Enfield Před 6 lety +13

    As I got to the end of the video, I could feel my blood pressure going up. I love my Mosin, and I wanted to defend it.
    Then I remembered two things.
    1) I have made a ton of modifications to it to make it a better shooter.
    2) My rifle is a 91/30 that had a ton of modifications done to it BEFORE I ever laid hands on it.
    I watched the vid early in the morning without a sufficient amount of caffeine in my system.

    • @Candrsenal
      @Candrsenal  Před 6 lety +16

      It is possible to love imperfect things.

    • @ericdeer5887
      @ericdeer5887 Před 6 lety +5

      Just ask my wife....

    • @1917Enfield
      @1917Enfield Před 6 lety +2

      I can ring an 8" X 13" gong at 200 yds with it. So it's pretty accurate. And the bolt isn't all the "mushy, springy" that you describe. It was also made in 1939, not 1891.
      It's 3 inches shorter than yours and it has started developing headspace issues. I am considering sending it to Mark at Anvil for some work.

    • @GunFunZS
      @GunFunZS Před 6 lety +1

      phinfan1972 8x 13 @200 is pretty accurate?

    • @1917Enfield
      @1917Enfield Před 6 lety +4

      GunFun ZS considering the gun was designed to hit a man-sized Target at 200 yards, I would say pegging basically a sheet of paper 5 out of 5 rounds is pretty good. Not to mention this is with iron sights, on a rifle that served at least one war, and probably other assignment since then. Have you ever looked down the sites of a Mosin after it's fired 10 or 15 rounds of 7.62 by 54R? The heat waves coming through your sight picture will mess up your sight picture.
      You got to remember this is an almost 80 year old Mosin Nagant, this isn't a Remington 700.

  • @fuzzydunlop7928
    @fuzzydunlop7928 Před 6 lety +6

    Ah yes, the mighty Russian boom-lance. Went into a gun-show in Florida and walked out with one complete with a sling with two near-completely hardened pouches. In one pouch was a tiny metal container inside which was some ungodly substance I can only assume is cosmoline and in the other was a box of corrosive-ass rounds fresh from some warehouse in Eastern Europe, by way of about a dozen or so years of storage. Good times. That was back in the days when you could buy one for 100 - 120. Damned inflation.

  • @nailed2thecross01
    @nailed2thecross01 Před 4 lety

    Just found your channel, I really enjoy it. Thank you for your efforts put into each video.

  • @renflo86
    @renflo86 Před 4 lety

    Awesome video guns and history....you sir are the man!!

  • @lefr33man
    @lefr33man Před 6 lety +26

    I like the Mosin, I like how rough it looks and it feels. my 91/30 is actually the most accurate bolt action rifle in my collection.

    • @hatimlaamri2132
      @hatimlaamri2132 Před 4 lety +6

      really? what rifles do you have in your collection? thanks

    • @quentinhoward99
      @quentinhoward99 Před 2 lety +1

      To be fair that probably doesn't speak to the accuracy of your mosin, but more so says how bad your other guns are.

    • @lefr33man
      @lefr33man Před 2 lety +2

      @@quentinhoward99 my guns aren't shot to shit, if that's what you're implying. I have acquired (many) other milsurp rifles that are more accurate on paper since then, but when want to make good groups (relatively speaking, those aren't bench rest rifles), I still come back to the good ol' Mosin. I guess i got used to it.

    • @quentinhoward99
      @quentinhoward99 Před 2 lety +1

      @@lefr33man Look I don't mean to be rude but unless it's been re-barreled or is a Finnish example I just don't think I can believe that. Out of the factory sniper qualified examples with pu scopes can't hold a group better than 3 moa on the best of days and that is a well established fact. Now if it has been re-barreled or is a Finnish example then feel free to correct me.

    • @lefr33man
      @lefr33man Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@quentinhoward99 Nope, regular 91/30 from 1943. As I said just before, I'm aware there are better shooters out there. I just shoot best with my Mosin. it falls naturally in my hands, the front sight has the ideal shape and size for me, and the trigger is pretty good on mine (I know there are mosins with horrible triggers out there), and handloading for it is easy.

  • @JB-ym4up
    @JB-ym4up Před 2 lety +3

    Never try to load penguins in your rear.

  • @deltavee2
    @deltavee2 Před 4 lety

    I have always regarded this as a historical gun show. Ian does a gun show. You guys have a larger ambit with the historical context so no, I don't see it as just a gun show. I've learned a lot about life and the times in the pre-1900 period and thank you. It is fascinating.

  • @twl107
    @twl107 Před 2 měsíci

    Yo dude love your videos!! Going to watch every single one of them!

  • @tstodgell
    @tstodgell Před 6 lety +52

    Moist Nugget is on C&Rsenal. Is this real life?

  • @NoyemiK
    @NoyemiK Před 6 lety +5

    After weeks of agony, you're finally out with this! Can't wait to tear into it.

    • @zman1508
      @zman1508 Před 6 lety +1

      Noyemi K. Hi my name is Quins

    • @zman1508
      @zman1508 Před 6 lety +1

      Pls Mari me

    • @NoyemiK
      @NoyemiK Před 6 lety +1

      😊 *tiny having a wedding*

    • @zman1508
      @zman1508 Před 6 lety +1

      Do you like Durries

  • @nindger4270
    @nindger4270 Před 3 lety +2

    Oh my God I can't believe I missed this episode back when it was released. The penguins are ingenious, that was actually a great way to visualize the issue.

  • @ford9339
    @ford9339 Před 2 lety +2

    "Uhh well this guys lazy" that penguin was trying his best , has camera shy

  • @cannonfodder4376
    @cannonfodder4376 Před 6 lety +9

    24:41-26:27 for some reason, the whole demonstration while informative was also quite funny for me for some reason. Especially with how you just watched the final penguin come around and just said, "I just like that part."

  • @MaxwellAerialPhotography
    @MaxwellAerialPhotography Před 6 lety +15

    buttloaders and penguins and garbage rods, this episode is amazing!!!

  • @WarHeroA21
    @WarHeroA21 Před 4 měsíci +1

    1:17:37 "...so as we'll see from 1909 to 19010, a number of minor changes appear to deal with the recoil of that new, more powerful round."
    Man. Mosin has been in service for a long time, huh.

  • @boatymcboatface2994
    @boatymcboatface2994 Před 2 lety

    Dang.......that was a good watch. Excellent video

  • @kennethbowers2897
    @kennethbowers2897 Před 5 lety +3

    Mauser rifles - Revolutionary bolt system, great hunter's rifle.
    Lee Enfield - Very fast very smooth action.
    Mosin Nagant - A cheap rifle back in the day.
    Mosin Nagant rifles are nice, the wood on them is beautiful but that's all I can really say, Mosin Nagants were famous for being cheap surplus rifles with a good cartridge back when they were imported.

  • @TheGreatDrAsian
    @TheGreatDrAsian Před 6 lety +6

    Your videos are perfect. Keep up the amazing work.

  • @Johnyrocket70
    @Johnyrocket70 Před 5 lety

    Best bedtime story, was out cold in 10 minutes. You are a lifesaver.

  • @Jamestfarrell
    @Jamestfarrell Před 6 lety +2

    A stellar presentation-Trotsky would be proud!

  • @schmit6576
    @schmit6576 Před 6 lety +6

    “Penguins will never be a good educational tool.”
    Othais: “Hold my beer”

  • @Haibokusha99
    @Haibokusha99 Před 6 lety +9

    No penguins were harmed in the making of this film.

  • @joshuamoses4641
    @joshuamoses4641 Před 5 lety +1

    thank you for they hard work
    keep it up

  • @kevynbrownell719
    @kevynbrownell719 Před 3 lety

    Great lesson. Thanx. There are many tales from WWII about that rifle.