xl_target wrote:We know that a Mosin can be made to shoot accurately. However, I would think that position and the way he is holding it, is just asking for a scope cut. The Mosin is no .22 LR.
The Mosin is not the strangest rifle found in Syria. See this article below about 5000 Stg. 44's captured in Syria. I didn't know that many still existed. They'll probably all be destroyed at the end of the conflict. It's enough to make a grown man cry.
Free Syrian Army captures 5000 STG44s
As they found out, they don't work well as anti aircraft weaponry.
Syrian Rebels Try To Shoot Down 747
I agree, it looks like a few casualties could result from that shooting style!
Those Stg 44s - a real tragedy. I would hate to think of what 5000 legal ones in the box would be worth -- can anyone say, "retirement"?
Throwing potatoes -- yes!
brihacharan wrote:A closer look at the mount ... It looks like the 'Griffin & Howe' side mount...
It is possible, but I doubt that Griffin and Howe made mounts for the Mosin Nagant. Alvin Linden had a couple of articles in American Rifleman back in the 20s about sporterizing Mosin Nagants, but these rifles, beautifully made and pristine, were sold in droves after WW 1 by the DCM and companies like Bannerman.
My thoughts are that this one (and probably a bunch of others, as well) are fitted with a mount like this one, used on AK47s:
http://www.promagindustries.com/product-p/pm092a.htm
The reason the whole business is up so high could very well be because an AK sidemount has to be below the bolt, due to the sheet metal action cover, so the same sidemount on an Mosin Nagant would be very hight.
Put on a set of those "see through" scope mounts like this:
and one could get a nose bleed from the high altitude above the stock, shooting it!