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Caleb
01-01-2015, 11:13 PM
Merry Christmas to me!

http://i.imgur.com/kSS1etG.jpg?1

Went ahead and paracord wrapped the wire stock.

http://i.imgur.com/ayhW6yb.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/aowoDYv.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/PiRfhaK.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/CWRwpNd.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/RCRfmtW.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/tS2vBys.jpg?1

Got bored and also wrapped the front sling swivel ring. (not sure if I like it)

http://i.imgur.com/fCsTm4B.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/0Cua3kY.jpg?1

I have ordered hand guards and a new grip to replace the beaver barf "wood" furniture. It is polymer impregnated with wood chips and it looks as if came out of the 60's or 70's, ugly as monkey poop. Hopefully I will get a range report this Saturday, stay tuned.

Rifle history/info:

The vz. 58 (model 58) is a 7.62mm assault rifle designed and manufactured in Czechoslovakia and accepted into service in the late 1950s as the 7,62 mm samopal vzor 58 ("7.62mm automatic firearm model 1958"), replacing the vz. 52 self-loading rifle and the 7.62×25mm Tokarev vz. 24 and vz. 26 submachine guns.

While externally the vz. 58 resembles the Soviet AK-47, it is a different design based on a short-stroke gas piston. It shares no parts with Kalashnikov rifles.

Development of the weapon began in 1956; leading the project was chief engineer Jiří Čermák assigned to the Konstrukta Brno facility in the city of Brno. The Soviet Union had begun insisting that the Warsaw Pact forces standardize on a common ammunition. As a result, the prototype, known as the "Koště" ("broom"), was designed to chamber the intermediate Soviet 7.62×39mm M43 cartridge, rather than the Czech 7.62×45mm vz. 52 round, used in both the earlier vz. 52 rifle and the vz. 52 light machine gun.[3] The assault rifle entered service in 1958 and over a period of 25 years (until 1984), over 920,000 weapons had been produced, fielded by the armed forces of Czechoslovakia, Cuba and several other Asian and African nations.

The vz. 58 was produced in three main variants: the standard vz. 58 P (Pěchotní or "infantry") model with a fixed buttstock made of a synthetic material (wood impregnated plastic, older versions used a wooden stock), the vz. 58 V (Výsadkový—"airborne"), featuring a side-folding metal shoulder stock, folded to the right side, and the vz. 58 Pi (Pěchotní s infračerveným zaměřovačem—"infantry with infrared sight"), which is similar to the vz. 58 P but includes a receiver-mounted dovetail bracket (installed on the left side of the receiver) used to attach an NSP2 night sight; it also has a detachable folding bipod and an enlarged conical flash suppressor.

A successor to the vz. 58 was proposed in the 1990s; the 5.56×45mm NATO ČZ 2000 assault rifle has been suggested as a possible replacement but due to a general lack of defense funds within the Czech Republic, the program was postponed. Another recent contender is the ČZW-556 assault rifle and ČZW-762 light machine gun which both use lever-delayed blowback which has more reliable accuracy and performance over the gas operation. In 2011, the Czech army started replacing vz. 58 with CZ-805 BREN. While vz. 58 still remains the main assault rifle of the Slovak army, the Slovak army has also been eyeing CZ-805 as a possible replacement to the aging vz. 58 rifles.


Members of Active Reserve of the Armed Forces of the Czech Republic armed with vz.58
The vz. 58 is a selective fire gas-operated weapon that bleeds expanding combustion gases generated in the barrel from the ignited cartridge through a port drilled in the barrel, 215 mm (8.5 in) from the chamber, opening into a hollow cylinder located above the barrel that contains a short-stroke piston. The vz. 58 does not have a gas regulator and the full force of the gas pressure is exerted on the piston head, propelling it backwards in a single impulsive blow. The piston is driven back only 19 mm (0.7 in) when a shoulder on the piston rod butts against the seating and no further movement is possible. There is a light return spring held between the piston shoulder and the seating which returns the piston to its forward position. The gas cylinder is vented after the piston has traveled back 16 mm (0.6 in) and the remaining gases are exhausted into the atmosphere on the underside of the cylinder via two ports. The entire piston rod is chromium-plated to prevent fouling.

The locking system features a locking block hinged from the bolt and housed in the bolt carrier that contains two locking lugs which descend into and engage locking shoulders in the receiver's internal guide rails. The weapon is unlocked by the short tappet-like stroke of the piston rod as it strikes the bolt carrier and drives it rearwards. After 22 mm (0.9 in) of unrestricted travel, a wedge-like surface on the bolt carrier moves under the breech locking piece and lifts it up and out of engagement with the locking recesses in the steel body. The breech locking piece swings up and this movement provides the leverage required for primary extraction. The breech block is then carried rearwards extracting the empty cartridge casing from the chamber. A fixed ejector passes through a groove cut in the underside of the bolt and the case is flung upwards clear of the gun.

Features





vz. 58 P
The spring-loaded extractor and firing pin are both housed inside the breech lock, while the fixed ejector is located at the base of the receiver.

The weapon does not have a conventional rotating hammer but is striker-fired and the striker is a steel bar hollowed from one end almost throughout its entire length to accommodate its own operating spring. At the open end of the striker, a plate is welded and there is a groove cut in each side of this to slide on the receiver guide rails. This hammer-striker enters the hollow bolt and drives a fully floating firing pin forward with each shot.[3]

The rifle uses a trigger mechanism with a lever-type fire mode selector, which is also a manual safety against accidental discharge. When the selector lever is placed in its rear position ("1"—single fire) the sear is disabled and the left striker catch is rotated by the disconnector, which is depressed by the bolt carrier after every shot and is therefore disconnected from the striker catch. The forward setting of the selector lever ("30"—automatic fire) disables the disconnector, and the left striker catch meshes with the sear mechanism. The center ("safe") setting with the selector lever pointing vertically downwards, mechanically lowers the trigger bar and the disconnector so there is no connection between the trigger and the semi-automatic sear which holds the hammer. The rifle also has an internal safety, which prevents the weapon from discharging when out of battery. The right striker-hammer catch disables the striker-hammer, and it can only be released by pulling the charging handle back and cocking the weapon.

The weapon is fed from a detachable box magazine with a 30-round cartridge capacity and made from a lightweight alloy.[3] When the last round from the magazine is fired, the bolt will remain locked open on the bolt catch, activated by the magazine's follower. The magazine release tab is located at the base of the receiver on the left side, behind the magazine well. The bolt carrier has a built-in guide rail used for reloading from 10-round stripper clips (from the SKS rifle). Despite their similarity, vz. 58 magazines are not interchangeable with those of the AK-47 and its derivatives.

An interesting feature on this rifle is the ability to quickly change the type of stock it has. The vz. 58 can appear either with its original wood stock or folding steel stock, or with one of the many aftermarket stocks available - including AR-15 style stock adapters that mount a buffer tube to the receiver. The latter usually has the buffer tube slightly angled down as to compensate for the very low ironsights on the vz. 58. Switching between the various options requires merely removal of a bolt at the rear of the receiver and swapping in the stock of choice.

Sights

The rifle's iron sights consist of a fully adjustable front post and a tangent rear sight with a sliding notch with range denominations from 100 to 800 m, graduated every 100 m. Besides this, the left side of the rear sight leaf is marked with the letter "U" (univerzální meaning "universal"), for snap shooting, firing at moving targets and night combat at ranges up to 300 m. The rifle's sight radius is 15 inches (38 cm).[3] The front sight base also serves as a mounting platform for the vz. 58 edged bayonet.

Accessories

Several modernization accessories have been manufactured for the vz. 58 platform from different companies. Accessories include "tactical" bolt release, extended and/or ambidextrous magazine release paddles, ambidextrous fire mode selectors, custom handguard rails, several types of sight mounting options and various muzzle brakes and compensators. Both civilian and military users use these upgrades, and they also see frequent use with private military companies in the Middle East.

Additional equipment supplied with the rifle includes: 4 spare magazines, a magazine pouch, vz. 58 bayonet and scabbard, cleaning brush, muzzle cap, oil bottle, unified sling, front sight adjustment tool and a threaded blank-firing adaptor. The vz. 58 also has a proprietary bipod.

skosh69
01-01-2015, 11:38 PM
Can I ask a question??? ;)

pony up
01-01-2015, 11:52 PM
I think you should but I am only one vote.:D

Lonestar grips.
01-01-2015, 11:54 PM
sweet rifle Caleb!

how do you like the folding stock? ever since I started to watch Strike Back I've wanted a folding stock AK.

sstpierre
01-02-2015, 12:32 AM
Nice Brother, real nice!

Caleb
01-02-2015, 07:38 AM
Can I ask a question??? ;)
No.
sweet rifle Caleb!

how do you like the folding stock? ever since I started to watch Strike Back I've wanted a folding stock AK.

It's ok, not very comfortable. The versatility of it is great and lightweight. With that said, I will swap it out for something more comfortable in the near future.

Caleb
01-03-2015, 01:59 PM
Range trip this morning went flawless. This rifle shot and fed everything right out of the box (lubed of course ). The sights were almost dead on, only hitting 2"s left of bullseye. I do not have a sight tool for this thing so, I used Kentucky windage. After two mags (60rds), I mounted a Primary Arms red dot on the hand guard and zeroed it in (at 50yds, I prefer 100yds). Thisvthing ate cheap Wolf steel ammo like it was chocolate cake at a fat girl's birthday party. The action was smooth, the recoil impulse was minimal for 7.62x39, and the muzzle rise was......non existent. Looks like my paracord wrapped stock worked great, did not feel any cheak slap (these rifles are notorious for it). Eventually, I will change it out. My new side mount came in last night but, I will have to D&T it. Will do that later.

I am thrilled with this rifle! It's awesome and much better than the AK (IMHO). Can't wait to take it out again.

Here is what it looks like now after the upgrades..

http://i.imgur.com/WYsu3hb.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/Dz2PrIs.jpg?1

With the red dot from Primary Arms. The dot mount is set up for an AR so, it sits kinda high on this rifle.

http://i.imgur.com/g6KZInT.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/yUWwCM7.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/iFcBRv9.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/xPF6PkH.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/NYafysI.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/gD6NlZO.jpg?1

http://i.imgur.com/bTXXq6c.jpg?1

skosh69
01-03-2015, 02:24 PM
Can I ask a question??? ;)

No.

But I have a question????

Caleb
01-03-2015, 05:07 PM
But I have a question????

No.....

skosh69
01-03-2015, 08:03 PM
No.....

Please????

Riverpigusmc
01-03-2015, 08:10 PM
Nice shooter

Let the Chimp speak

Caleb
01-03-2015, 08:55 PM
Please????

Nice shooter

Let the Chimp speak

Fine......one question. Go.

skosh69
01-04-2015, 01:30 AM
Fine......one question. Go.

Where's the bathroom?

Caleb
01-04-2015, 10:31 AM
Where's the bathroom?

Outside next to the flower pot.

skosh69
01-04-2015, 02:35 PM
Outside next to the flower pot.

See, that wasn't so hard was it?

RKP
01-04-2015, 02:49 PM
Outside next to the flower pot.

.... you mean the one with the deceased flowers in it? :D

Caleb
01-05-2015, 06:55 PM
See, that wasn't so hard was it?

Only because pig said so.

.... you mean the one with the deceased flowers in it? :D

Yup, thats the one!

BigAm
01-06-2015, 04:32 AM
Got one as well about 8 months back...and love it! I ended up selling off my AK since I was shooting this one so much. Mags are light, love the bolt hold open on last round, gun recoils like a dream. Now if the thread pitch was the same as a AK I would be happy!

Caleb
02-10-2015, 08:44 AM
Got one as well about 8 months back...and love it! I ended up selling off my AK since I was shooting this one so much. Mags are light, love the bolt hold open on last round, gun recoils like a dream. Now if the thread pitch was the same as a AK I would be happy!

Sorry I missed this reply.

The threads are different but, there are plenty of choices out there now. Look at CNC Warrior and Czechpoint for options. I went with the cnc "phantom" flash hider since the recoil is very manageable on this platform. I will update this thread as soon as I get all my "upgrades" (not that it needs it) on the rifle.

Shark1007
03-14-2015, 10:47 PM
You cost me money! Fortunately no too much, PSA has 'em for 399 bucks. Where do ya get the extra mags and stuff?

Great thing about a friend going ahead of you, let me know the secret sources and the tricks. I will feed ya when we bring the Hatteras to WPB next time.

Caleb
03-14-2015, 10:54 PM
You cost me money! Fortunately no too much, PSA has 'em for 399 bucks. Where do ya get the extra mags and stuff?

Great thing about a friend going ahead of you, let me know the secret sources and the tricks. I will feed ya when we bring the Hatteras to WPB next time.

You will love it!

This guy has them for cheap... http://www.czfirearms.us/index.php?topic=68826.0 .... Normally they run $35 each and come from Israel.

You should recieve 3 mags with your rifle. The bayo, sling, and cleaning kit you can get online or ebay.

My VZ is modified with aftermarket goodies from Czechpoint. Com.