Sales tax will be added to sales in Wisconsin and Minnesota. Print Size: Clear: Anatomy: Japanese Rifle Type 99 Arisaka quantity. Displayed in profile assembled and disassembled, this print is great for small arms history fans or Pacific Theater buffs. If you purchase the firearm, please send a copy of your FFL or dealers FFL to only ship to FFL and C&R. From our Anatomy Series, this is the Japanese Type 99 Arisaka rifle. Please know your own state laws and restrictions. Please do not attempt to purchase this gun if it is illegal in your state. I try to take as many pictures as possible so you know what you are buying. There is not any provenance on this rifle. This rifle is a great example of a vet bring back rifle from the Pacific Island battles. A great addition to a WW2 or Japanese collection. This one retains the aircraft wings on the rear sight. The bore is darkened with good lands and grooves. The mum is has not been altered, the bolt does not match the gun but does match itself, small metal parts match. Maybe another member who knows more about all the series, would be kind enough to post what series these rifles exactly are.We are offering a 31st series Type 99 Japanese rifle made at the Toyo Kogyo arsenal. I am really not sure what series rifles these are. It is also 100% matching with full mum, and also has almost all of it's original varnish, or lacquer finish. Perfect example of how we were putting the squeeze on the Japanese in the final years or the war. This ugly rifle is one of my favorite WW2 weapons I own. The second rifle, a "last ditch" I purchased a long time ago also, before the interest in these "ugly" rifles. It has all matching numbers, and full mum. The rifle has a duffle cut also, that was done fairly cleanly and is very solid. I did write down that he was USN, and got the rifle in trade from a B-29 crew member on the island of Tinian, just a few days after the second nuclear attack on Nagasaki. This was a long time ago, and had no camera, but wish I did now. He wanted to keep the plate when he sold it to me, and I could not talk him out of it, and leave it attached to the rifle. When I bought this rifle from the Vet, there was a small brass plate with his name and info, date, and Tinian Island. If you notice there are 2 holes in the left side of stock, near the muzzle. The mid-war rifle with the the upper hand guard and metal butt plate is an interesting rifle. Muzzle velocity was rated at 2,394 feet per second and the firing action was known as 'bolt action', requiring each individual round to be loaded by operating the bolt handle. Hi, 2 rifles I have had in the collection for a long time. The Type 99 made use of the 7.7x58mm Arisaka cartridge of which five such rounds were fed into the system by way of an internal box magazine or 'stripper clips'.
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