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Arsenal bulgarian makarov in .380
Arsenal bulgarian makarov in .380










arsenal bulgarian makarov in .380

If it's commercial, you're probably right about the manufacture date being in the mid 90's. Sorry the picture is not better but that is the lighting you get with an iPhone. While the import marks are on the gun they look professional. The single action is 6 1/2 pounds but I expect that to improve as there were zero marks in the internal parts from any ware.

#Arsenal bulgarian makarov in .380 code

Year Code 1970 = 10 1971 = 11 1972 = 12 1973 = 13 1974 = 14 1975 = 15 (First year of Makarov production under Russian supervision) 1976 = 16 (First year of Makarov production under Bulgarian supervision) 1977 = 17. After the two Cyrillic letters look at the first two numbers. Basically they produce a number of rifles under a series and move on. The Makkie round is somewhere mid-point between the.380. The PA63 uses the 9X18 round but is in NO WAY a Mak. It is far easier to use than the Polish PA-63, and the mags are NOT interchangeable. The 9X18 Makarov is a nice small pistol with more 'pop' than a.380, and is light, reasonably accurate, and reliable. Under the project leadership of Nikolay Fyodorovich Makarov, it became the Soviet Union's standard military and police side arm in 1951. The Makarov pistol or PM (Russian: Пистолет Макарова, Pistolet Makarova, literally Makarov's Pistol) is a Russian semi-automatic pistol. Izhevsk Mechanical Plant (1949-2013) / Kalashnikov Concern (2013-present) (USSR/Russia), Ernst Thaelmann (Germany), Arsenal AD (Bulgaria), Norinco (China), Factory 626 (China)Ĩ-round detachable box magazine (10- and 12-round available on the PMM)īlade front, notch rear (drift adjustable)












Arsenal bulgarian makarov in .380