|
The Arsenal
AK47 has the traditional
milled receiver,which means the older stock set and misc other
parts

|
|
The muzzle break on
this AK is NOT original,
but it 's not our rifle so we had to leave it on.

|
|
The pistol grip is
the
classic 'thick' wood type which really
fills the hand. Only minimal amount of writing on this receiver
in back behind the safety

|
|
The milled receiver
is heavier than the stamped
receiver of the AKM

|
|
The
Arsenal AK47 has a classic look that is hard to beat

|
|
Under
different flash settings the wood and metal color change,
so photography can affect how a gun looks in a big way

|
|
The Bulgarian
Arsenal AK47 and the Romanian WASR-10 go head to head. From
a few feet away the untrained eye would see these as the same rifle,
but they are really quite different

|
|
Looking
close up at these two the differences start to become obvious.
Milled vs Stamped receivers, pistol grips, stock and handguard
shape and material are the obvious external differences

|
|
The camera and lighting
can affect the photos, se here are a few taken with different
flash options to help see
the fine details

|
|
Again
with a slightly different angle in each shot to move where
light / flash hit the metal and reflect

|
|
The
internals are very
close the milled
version is much more sturdy of course

|
|
The two
rear sights and gas pistons and another shot of the
two receivers

|
|
The rear of the receiver where
the stock attaches and the
recoil springs. Another
shot of the two rear sights and
bolt carrier

|
|
The two recoil springs
and bolt carriers, most AK47s had unpainted bolt carriers.
The receiver covers, the AKM uses the thinner ribbed cover
the AK47 has the traditional thicker smooth metal

|
|
The bolt carriers from
the other side and the front of
the receiver / front trunnion
|
|
Flipped
over the wider AK47 pistol grip looks almost twice as thick as the
AKM pistol grip.

|
|
The
AK47 has the bottom tang to hold the stock in place. The
two magazine wells and trigger guards

|
|
The modern AKM,
Romanian WASR-10 on
top, the classic AK47
style Bulgarian
Arsenal AK47 below (with sling)
|
|
The
two without
magazines. Overall length
and other dimensions are almost identical

|
|
The stamped receivers
have rivets and small
magazine dimples. The milled AK47 receiver has smooth
sides and large cut outs to help reduce weight

|
|
The stocks are close
but not the same shape.
The Romanian WASR-10 uses a thick laminate (plywood) with heavy
usually sloppy lacquer finish or no finish and a simple red stain.The
Bulgarian AK47 uses a solid piece of wood and an oil
finish. The end of the milled receiver is at an angle, where
the stamped AKM are cut straight.

|
|
The solid wood
of the AK47 and the plywood stock
of the AKM. Bras pins are placed in eh stocks and handguards
when plywood (laminate) is used to keep the layers
from separating.

|
|
The AKM gas tube on
top is solid and the
gas holes are in the gas block, while the AK47 gas tube (below)
has holes and the AK47 gas block is solid.The AK47 has some
weird aftermarket muzzle break, it should be removed as soon as
possible of course. The WASR-10 sports a muzzle nut
(which does not count as a part
for 922r)

|
|
The Bulgarian
Arsenal AK47 and the Arsenal (of
NV, USA) SA M-7

|
|
The trigger guards
and pistol grips. Both
are milled receivers so they have the lower tang

|
|
The two back to back.
The biggest differences
the black polymer stock and handguards on the newer Arsenal SA
M-7 and the 'plastic waffle' mag

|
|
A
big difference is the gas blocks, the newer SA M07 has the typical
90* style of many Bulgarian AKs

|
|
The two Bulgarian AK47
side by side

|
|
The two Bulgarian AK47s
in different lighting
conditions

|
|
The SA M-7 and the
Arsenal AK47

|
|
AK47
questions, Wood vs Poly stock sets, paint vs parkerizing, new
vs old

|
|
Either
AK47 would be a great shooter and a rugged useful rifle

|