Wednesday, August 27, 2008

From Russia, For Cash




















Here's my Nagant, marked 1923/45. To complete the retrospy look, it is paired with a tiny Russian radiotelegraph key! (Which joined Collection X courtesy of Turk Turon, presumably smuggled out by camel-train from Bishkek).

I should have added a coin (kopek?) for scale. The knob of the key is about two-thirds the diameter of a penny.

And just to prove I truly do commute from The Past, one of the radio bookshelves in my office at Roseholme. Note the very modern cameras -- no leathette-covered cardboard Brownie for this gal! -- and high-fidelity Rochelle-salts crystal microphone, improvised from a Brush-Clevite headphone element plus odds and ends, not to mention the very latest edition of Radio magazine's Handbook and several previous years as well.

(Time travel works both ways -- at the upper right, you can just see two editions of Horowitz and Hill's The Art Of Electronics, a marvelous book for anyone with a scientific or technical background who needs to "do" electronics. The boys'll get you up to speed fast! Why two? They did do a fair amount of revsions and expansion but I wore out my first copy; I only keep it for sentiment).

9 comments:

  1. This is an incredible strategic move.

    I've been around a LOT of women at the range, and first of all, range women are naturally hotter than "normal" women. Guy thing, I'm sure. Now, a plain looking woman shooting an average looking firearm is a joy to behold. An average looking woman shooting an average looking firearm is a trest. "You see that woman shooting that Smith ten? Nice!!!"

    A hot dame shooting a brutally, brutally ugly firearm? "WE'RE NOT WORTHY!!!"

    The contrast between the firearm and the shooter makes the beauty of the shooter ever more apparent, is all I'm saying. Damn.

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  2. That is a NICE-looking Nagant.

    Did that .32 cylinder ever turn up?

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  3. It's in my box of shooty stuff in the attic. I'll lay hands on it if my roomie wants to go plinkin' with her new toy this weekend.

    (Of course, I also have a hunnert-n-sumpin' rounds of Fiocchi 7.62 Nagant if she'd rather use that to fam-fire it...) :D

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  4. Nice old gun.
    Love the cameras and mike; brings back a lot of memories of when I was a kid.

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  5. A 1923 Nagant? I'm jealous. Mine is but a 1938 Tula built revolver, if I recall.
    But my real favorite is a 1910 Mosin rifle, with INTACT Imperial Russian Crests (except where the damn import overstamped one of them) Built the same year my now deceased grandmother was born.

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  6. Joseph: you win! Very kewl, indeed.

    I'd inherited a twin-lens camera similar to the ones in the phote when I was a child. Left it on a train in Montreal when I was 9 and missed it ever since. The one on the left takes "620" film, 120 on a skinnier spool. They don't make it but B&H sells 120 rewound onto old 620 spools. They really, really want them back!

    Og, you're makin' me blush an' stuff.

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  7. If Tam can't turn up that .32 cylinder, J&G Sales (Prescott, AZ) has 'em listed in their latest ad. 'Course, they're about the same price as the Nagants in the ad, too.

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  8. No sleep cant type look here.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?
    v=vvF4yurWSc0

    ReplyDelete

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