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Nagant Model 1895 Revolver

Friday, October 15th, 2010 at 12:47 PM

Nagant Model 1895 Revolver
Gun Collecting

Nagant Model 1895 Revolver

Nagant Model 1895 Revolver

FirearmsTruth.com

FirearmsTruth.com

Michigan --(Ammoland.com)- One of the most unique vintage military revolvers is known for its use in Russia, but yet it was in fact a Belgian designed firearm.

This was the Model 1895 Nagant revolver, which was in actuality developed in 1894 by Emile and Leon Nagant, two Belgian gun designers, who had previous experience with the Russian arms industry.

Their development of the revolver coincided with the Imperial Russian Army’s need for a new sidearm, which the firm of Fabrique d’armes Emile et Leon Nagant designed and brought to production. The Nagant brothers were already well known at the Russian Court as they had previously helped design the now infamous Mosin-Nagant Model 1892 rifle.

Nagant 7.62x38 Ammunition

Nagant 7.62x38 Ammunition

What makes this firearm so unique is that unlike other revolvers, it features a cylinder that moves forward before the hammer strikes the round, thus closing the cap from the cylinder to the barrel. Additionally, the Nagant M1895 further utilized a specially designed cartridge with a long case that featured a tapered mouth that keeps the bullet seated inside the case below the cartridge case rim. This was the 7.62x38mmR, which is also known today as the 7.62mm Nagant less commonly as the Cartridge, Type R. Together the features of the gun’s design along with the bullet configuration prevent gas leakage between the cylinder and the barrel, making this one of the only revolvers that could effectively be used with a silencer – although that wasn’t really a consideration when it was developed. To the designers, the deeply seated bullet within the cartridge of the case allowed for the velocity of the bullet to be increased by 50 to 150 feet per second.

Additionally, at the time however the caliber was chosen as a way to simplify the tooling used in barrel making and manufacture of projectiles. The drawback of this cylinder design is that the revolver has a rather heavy pull of 13 pound wit the single action trigger and a 20 pound double action trigger pull. The other downside is that the Nagant M1895 can be a difficult gun to reload, with one cartridge at a time being loaded and then extracted manually. This is obviously not practical in combat situations.

The Nagant M1895 was produced throughout World War I in both single-action and double-action versions, and this has come to be known as “private’s” or “enlisted” models and “officer’s models” respectively. However, whether this is fully accurate has yet to be absolutely determined. What is a known fact is that except for rare examples for target competition and similar uses, production of the single action variety ended in 1918. Likewise many single- action revolvers were converted to double action, and as a result today single-action examples are extremely rare.

Furthermore, while the Nagant M1895 Revolver was in fact designed for the Czar’s army, it did remain in use through the Russian Revolution and Civil War, and was utilized by the Soviets. Production, which had originally begun in Belgium and moved to Russia long before the outbreak of the First World War, continued after the Soviets took power. The gun served throughout the world and was used in a variety of wars, from the Chinese Civil War to the Korean War and even limited use in Vietnam. The “silencer” models were also utilized during the Second World War by scout and reconnaissance troops, and during the Cold War these silent versions found clandestine uses, as well as use in the aforementioned conflict in South East Asia.

NKVD Soliders Firing Nagant Revolvers

NKVD Soliders Firing Nagant Revolvers

The iconic image of the revolver should also be familiar to film buffs – and the Nagant M1895 was recently seen in the latest Sherlock Holmes movie starring Robert Downey Jr. (the character is trying to create a silencer), while a Belgian made version served as a sidearm of choice for Young Indiana Jones. The infamous NKVD soldiers depicted in the film Enemy at the Gates fire away at deserting troops with the revolvers as well.

Today the gun is not uncommon, although those available without the import stamps can be quite rare. And while it may sound like it features a complex design, the truth is far from it. It is a reliable and simple to use gun that might be Belgian designed but it is as sturdy as a Russian Cossack. While not prone to jamming, when all else failed one could take the advice of an Imperial Russian officer, who reportedly stated that if the Nagant failed to fire, “you could fix it with a hammer” or likewise use it as one!

Peter Suciu is executive editor of FirearmsTruth.com, a website that tracks and monitors media bias against guns and our Second Amendment rights. Visit: FirearmsTruth.com

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U.S. Government Blocking Return Of Surplus M1 Garands Rifles From Korea

Thursday, August 19th, 2010 at 1:39 PM

U.S. Government Blocking Return Of Surplus M-1 Garand Rifles From Korea
by Brian McCombie

Last year, South Korean military officials announced plans to sell off 86,000 surplus M1 Garand rifles and another 22,000 M1carbines. But will bureaucratic red tape from the U.S. side hamper these sales?

M-1 Garand Rifle

U.S. Blocking Return Of Surplus M1Garands Rifles From Korea

Gundigest.com

Gundigest.com

South Korea --(AmmoLand.com)- Will the US Block Korea from shipping surplus Garands?

Those rifles had sat in South Korean warehouses for the last five decades, and could prove a treasure trove for military surplus retailers, collectors, and shooters. (see South Korea to sell 108,000 Garand Rifles to US Gun Collectors)

Recently, though, came news from South Korea that the sale of these M1 Garand’s, and another 22,000 M1 Carbines, was in a sort of bureaucratic limbo.

According to the Korea Times, “The U.S. government opposed South Korea’s bid to sell hundreds of thousands of aging U.S. combat rifles to American gun collectors…The [Ministry of National Defense] announced the plan last September as part of efforts to boost its defense budget, saying the export of the M1 Garand and carbine rifles would start by the end of 2009.”

However, “The U.S. administration put the brakes on the plan, citing ‘problems’ that could be caused by the importation of the rifles. The problems the U.S. government cited were somewhat ambiguous, said an official at the Ministry of National Defense on condition of anonymity.”

“The U.S. insisted that imports of the aging rifles could cause problems such as firearm accidents,” the official told Korea Times.

“It was also worried the weapons could be smuggled to terrorists, gangs or other people with bad intentions. We’re still looking into the reason why the U.S. administration is objecting to the sale of the rifles and seeking ways to resolve the problems raised.”

Time for some grass roots action: Contact your congressmen and senators an tell them to expedite this repatriation of American Made Rifles.

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