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THE SKS CARBINE
This is the first book to describe all models
from all countries, including Romania, of the SKS Carbine on a part-by-part
basis. A must for both collectors and shooters. 
Book Description
At the start of World War II, the Soviet Union and the United States
had the only two armies equipped with semiautomatic battle rifles.
Both rifles fired the powerful service cartridges developed at the
turn of the century for the bolt action rifles. The M1 Garand proved
more rugged than did the Soviet's SVT38 and SVT40 models which experienced
such severe breakage problems that the rifle was withdrawn from production
in 1942.
Soviet designers had begun work the year
before on a new, medium powered cartridge that it was hoped would
alleviate the parts breakage problem. S.G. Simonov was assigned the
task and in 1944, produced a prototype semiautomatic carbine, or short
rifle, that had a magazine holding ten rounds. The new carbine was
battle-tested later that year and received glowing reports. The end
of World War II however, delayed production of the new carbine until
it was clear that the Soviet Union had embarked upon a "Cold
War" with its former allies. Starting 1949, two Soviet factories
began mass production of the new carbine with its distinctive folding
bayonet. In the years following, the SKS carbine would form the mainstay
of many "national liberation movements"around the world
including North Vietnam and many African resistance movements. The
SKS Carbine was distributed widely among Soviet client states and
friends, and revolutionary and terrorist movements. Like its successor,
the AK47, the SKS is found in armies and police forces around the
world. The Palestinian security police force continues to issue the
SKS to its officers. The SKS was also manufactured in many countries
including East Germany, Red China, North Vietnam, North Korea, Romania
and Yugoslavia.
In the late 1980s, Chinese SKS carbines were
imported in large quantities into the United States for the civilian
market. Initially, ex-military weapons were imported but as these
ran out, Chinese factories dug out long-stored tooling out and mass-produced
"sporting" versions of the carbines. Shortly after the Soviet
Union imploded in 1991, the first Russian SKS carbines reached North
America. These were an extreme rarity as until then, the only specimens
in the country had been captured during the early days of the Vietnam
War and brought back by returning veterans. Collectors as well as
shooters snapped these up as fast as they appeared.
Identifying SKS Carbines by country of origin
and finding replacement parts that were interchangeable soon became
a challenge. "The SKS Carbine" by Poyer and Kehaya is the
first book to provide a part-by-part description organized by national
origin and time of manufacture including Russian, Chinese, North Korean,
North Vietnamese, Romanian, etc. Variation in parts is not as great
as in some American military weapons because of the tendency of Communist
governments to resist change or innovation in manufacturing processes.
But there are distinct differences in parts, not only in those made
by one country, but in interchangeability between parts made in different
countries. This book describes all parts and tells the reader in clear
and concise terms which parts can be interchanged and which cannot.
Other chapters provide detailed information on the history of the
development of the SKS, its use by communist forces around the world,
descriptions of various models and appendixes that tell collectors
and shooters how to manufacture many parts which might not be available
on the market.
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