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sksvlad
Joined: May 17 2006 Posts: 9 Location: The State of new York
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Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2007 9:00 am Post subject: Stacking Arisakas |
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I watched "Letters from Iwo Jima" in which there were Arisakas shown stacked in 3 rifle tripods while Japanese soldiers worked. How did they do it? Unlike Styer M95 or Schmidt-Rubins, there are no stacking rods on Arisaka. _________________ sksvlad is at yahoo.com |
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03man
Joined: Jul 30 2005 Posts: 131 Location: Denver, NC
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Posted: Mon Nov 05, 2007 8:33 pm Post subject: Re: Stacking Arisakas |
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sksvlad wrote: | I watched "Letters from Iwo Jima" in which there were Arisakas shown stacked in 3 rifle tripods while Japanese soldiers worked. How did they do it? Unlike Styer M95 or Schmidt-Rubins, there are no stacking rods on Arisaka. |
Sure there are, the cleaning rod is the 'stacking' rod; except for the very late configuration rifles, all Arisakas were equiped with rods.
Also the hook on the bayonet could be used for stacking, Only two out of the three or more rifles need a hook or rod to stack. _________________ 03man |
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gwsiii
Joined: Aug 21 2003 Posts: 2240 Location: Hayden, AL
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Posted: Tue Nov 06, 2007 7:52 am Post subject: stacking |
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I've stacked Type 44s for display, and Type 38 longs (with early bayonets hooked), I haven't gotten around to doing 99s, generally you just need 3 hands. I might experiment with it this weekend. Trey _________________ Subscribe to BANZAI!
Fill out a Japanese Rifle Datasheet.
I didn't pay to much for that old Arisaka, I just bought it a little bit too soon! |
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arisakadogs
Joined: Oct 05 2003 Posts: 191
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Posted: Wed Nov 07, 2007 7:59 am Post subject: |
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Sounds like a good way to cause wear or scratches to your rifles finish. _________________ "A woman, a dog & and a walnut tree. The more ya beat em, the better they be" (From "The Red Bagde of Courage") |
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DEFUC
Joined: Aug 17 2004 Posts: 200 Location: UP of michigan
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Posted: Fri Nov 09, 2007 11:05 pm Post subject: |
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Stacking rifles without scuffing them is easy ,if you do it correctly, get 2 friends, practice a bit and then carefully "stack' them, troops trained from day one of basic to do it could do it in a second,in the dark.doing it by yourself is gonna be a pain. |
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