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Ak 47 serial number location
Ak 47 serial number location













ak 47 serial number location

#AK 47 SERIAL NUMBER LOCATION HOW TO#

If I figure out how to add this feature, I will detail it in a future article. Unfortunately, this receiver did not contain any of the bolt hold open parts that the original rifles had. It was produced by Nodak-Spud for another vendor some time ago. The receiver is one that I found second hand, but new. The barrel came from AK-Builder, as did the rivets I used to assemble the kit. It is my understanding that the Romanian RPK trunnions are more or less the same as the PSL trunnions, so you could piece together a kit if you needed to (The front trunnion typically being the hardest single part to find for these in my experience). If you strike out looking for a kit, all is not lost. They are currently out of stock, but I do see kits for these turn up on auction sites fairly regularly. The main portion of the parts used in this build comes from a parts kit purchased from Centerfire Systems a while back. Here is the parts kit, receiver, and barrel for the build. So, I started looking at building a PSL to replace the one I’d lost. Unfortunately, my rifle (Serial Number R5363-03) was stolen right about the time these rifles had become hard to find and expensive here (likely due to the huge demand for them in the Middle East). If I did my part, I was getting MOA accuracy out of it with ammo it liked. I also saw them very commonly used in Iraq and Afghanistan by their respective armies and security forces. I first came into contact with the PSL rifle in 2002 being carried by Romanian troops in Kandahar. However, it was issued with a similar optic to the SVD. The PSL uses a stamped receiver as opposed to the milled receiver used in the SVD, which at the time it was developed was a much less expensive option. I believe a lot of this rifle was designed with economy in mind, as a number of the parts are also used in their RPK rifles(which is quite helpful if you want to build a PSL but can’t find a part kit). But other than being chambered in the same cartridge they’re completely different. At a glance, it looks similar to the SVD-similar enough that they’ve been referred to as “Romanian Dragunovs”. For all intents and purposes, they’re all the same rifle. This rifle goes by several other names in the US FPK, SSG-97, PSL-54, and ROMAK III. Romania was one of these and they produced the PSL chambered in 7.62x54r. However, there were a few nations that designed their own rifles for this purpose. A chunk of the armies of the Warsaw Pact simply purchased SVDs from the Soviets. From my research, it does not appear that SVDs were manufactured by the other Warsaw Pact nations like AKs were. Really, these were more like what we now call a Designated Marksman Rifle in both what they were mechanically and how they were employed. During the Cold War, the Soviet Red Army adopted the SVD as its “Sniper Rifle”.















Ak 47 serial number location