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WW2 Photo Russian sniper Roza Shanina 54 confirmed kills with Mosin Rifle 259

$ 2.61

Availability: 76 in stock
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  • Condition: New
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    Description

    WW2 Photo Picture Russian sniper Roza Shanina had 54 confirmed kills with Russian 1891/30 PU 7.62x54R Mosin Nagant Sniper Rifle  #259
    This is a nice reproduction of an photograph
    Size is about 4" x 6" (10x15cm)
    WATERMARKS WILL NOT BE ON YOUR PHOTO
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    Lyudmila Mykhailivna Pavlichenko was born in the Ukrainian town of Belaya Tserkov on July 12th, 1916. She moved to Kiev with her family at the age of fourteen. There she joined a shooting club and developed into a sharpshooter, while working as a grinder at the Kiev Arsenal factory. In June 1941, 24-year old Pavlichenko was in her fourth year of studying history at the Kiev University when Nazi Germany began its invasion of the Soviet Union. Pavlichenko was among the first round of volunteers at the recruiting office, where she requested to join the infantry and subsequently she was assigned to the Red Army's 25th Rifle Div.
    Mosin-Nagant Model 1891/30: Russia’s World War II Sniper Rifle,
    Russia made more than 300,000 Model 1891/30 sniper rifles during the war.
    The Mosin-Nagant Model 1891 bolt-action rifle combined a simple design by Russian Captain Sergei Mosin with a five-round internal box magazine designed by Belgians Émile and Léon Nagant. Entering Russian service in 1892, it remained the standard long arm of the Russian infantry through the Russo-Japanese War, World War I and, in its improved 1930 Soviet version, World War II.
    In 1932 the Red Army pulled Mosin-Nagants from assembly lines to modify them as sniper rifles. Gunsmiths reconfigured the bolt handle to make room for 3.5–4x telescopic sights; raised the foresight a millimeter, allowing a sniper to use open sights on targets out to 600 meters; and lightened the trigger pull to a range of 4.4 to 5.3 pounds. Snipers still complained about the weapon’s excessive length and weight, as well as its poor quality wooden stocks, which often warped during weather changes.
    Despite its shortcomings, the Model 1891/30 was rugged, reliable and accurate, its average minute of arc ranging from a 1.5 to below 1 (less than an inch over 100 meters). It proved murderously successful. In fact, German snipers reportedly preferred captured Mosin-Nagants to their own Mauser Karabiner 98
    Details
    Type:
    New
    Print on high quality Photo Paper
    Format Size: About 4
    " X 6" (10 x 15 cm)
    WATERMARKS WILL NOT BE ON YOUR PHOTO
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