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Right now I am sure everyone who shoots 7.62x39 and other Russian calibers are going nuts, as I will bet we are getting nothing from them for a long time.
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I am still trying to get rid of the two ak's I have now... let alone keeping them and trying to find ammo...Right now I am sure everyone who shoots 7.62x39 and other Russian calibers are going nuts, as I will bet we are getting nothing from them for a long time.
I'd never sell a gun, especially in these troubled times. It's far easier to store a gun than to try and acquire one once ammo becomes more available. I last sold some guns in 1985 to buy lenses for my 35mm camera system. The ultra-sweaty humidity of Northern Virginia mildewed the interior surfaces of the lenses, and 35mm film is no longer available. I have somewhere around $3000 of Nikon and Vivitar photo equipment that sets unused and has for many years. If that equipment was an AR or an AK, it would be as useful today as it was in 1985. Keep your AK-type rifles. You never know what the future will bring.I am still trying to get rid of the two AKs I have now... let alone keeping them and trying to find ammo...
True as well, at least according to my ex-Ukrainian wife... lolI'd never sell a gun, especially in these troubled times. It's far easier to store a gun than to try and acquire one once ammo becomes more available. I last sold some guns in 1985 to buy lenses for my 35mm camera system. The ultra-sweaty humidity of Northern Virginia mildewed the interior surfaces of the lenses, and 35mm film is no longer available. I have somewhere around $3000 of Nikon and Vivitar photo equipment that sets unused and has for many years. If that equipment was an AR or an AK, it would be as useful today as it was in 1985. Keep your AK-type rifles. You never know what the future will bring.
Old Soviet joke: Why do Russians pour oil into their flower beds? Because that's where the guns are buried...
It is certainly hard to sell any gun stuff here....I'd never sell a gun, especially in these troubled times. It's far easier to store a gun than to try and acquire one once ammo becomes more available. I last sold some guns in 1985 to buy lenses for my 35mm camera system. The ultra-sweaty humidity of Northern Virginia mildewed the interior surfaces of the lenses, and 35mm film is no longer available. I have somewhere around $3000 of Nikon and Vivitar photo equipment that sets unused and has for many years. If that equipment was an AR or an AK, it would be as useful today as it was in 1985. Keep your AK-type rifles. You never know what the future will bring.
Old Soviet joke: Why do Russians pour oil into their flower beds? Because that's where the guns are buried...
I still have a case of 7.62x39 ammo sealed in a metal box a friend gave me for $50 a decade ago-- $50 was cheap for it back thenRight now I am sure everyone who shoots 7.62x39 and other Russian calibers are going nuts, as I will bet we are getting nothing from them for a long time.