DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION) DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION) DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION) DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION) DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION) DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION) DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION) DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION) DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION) DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION)

DEACTIVATED SKS 7.62 RIFLE (MATCHING) (NEW EU DEACTIVATION)

This is a very nice deactivated Chinese SKS 7.62 Rifle which has full matching numbers and fitted with a leather sling, this was deactivated in 2019 so it has a moving bolt under spring pressure, tigger and safety. UK sales only.

The SKS was first produced in the Soviet Union but was later widely exported and manufactured by various nations. Its distinguishing characteristics include a permanently attached folding bayonet and a hinged, fixed magazine. As the SKS lacked select-fire capability and its magazine was limited to ten rounds, it was rendered obsolete in the Soviet Armed Forces by the introduction of the AK-47 in the 1950s. Nevertheless, SKS carbines continued to see service with the Soviet Border Troops and second-line and reserve army units for decades. The SKS was manufactured at Tula Arsenal from 1949 to 1958, and at the Izhevsk Arsenal from 1953 to 1954. Altogether, the Soviet Union produced 2.7 million SKS carbines. Throughout the Cold War, millions of additional SKS carbines and their derivatives were also manufactured under license in the People's Republic of China, as well as a number of countries allied with the Eastern Bloc. The SKS was exported in vast quantities and found favour with insurgent forces around the world as a light, handy weapon which was adequate for guerrilla warfare despite its conventional limitations

Code: 7515

595.00 GBP