Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

The Surgeons Ghost

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Minuteman
Feb 10, 2012
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Geary, Oklahoma
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TzliDT2L2jA&feature=plcp


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Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

I had one of these, and with 70's vintage surplus FN Ball ammo it was around a 1-moa rifle at best. Shortly after I sold it, the Serbian M75 sniper ammo became available for a short period here in the State's. Wish I would have had the chance to see if it was any better.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

Well, at least it functioned. The shooter didn't look that far away from the target and he was hitting the dirt. I would've been more impressed had he taken the time to zero the rifle after assembling it, and showed some nice groups.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

I wish they'd import genuine ones here to the US like they're doing with the Zastava PAP. It's quite possibly the most accuracy AK out there. It'll do about 3/4 moa or better depending on ammo. Only problem it has is the barrel heats up quickly.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

A friend of mine had one of these a few years back.He spent a lot of money on it and never got it to shoot worth a shit.He even tried to work up a load and couldnt get it to do nothing.Expensive lesson learned.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

Well from the sounds of the post's above it must be hit or miss (pardon the pun) but I had a local guy who had one.

He was doing around 1.5 moa with it, not to happy with it he brought it into me to see what could be done and if there was anything wrong with it.

Upon inspection I noticed that the scope base on the rifle had some wobble to it. He gave me the OK to do what ever is necessary to get it to quite moving.

Well I got out the welder and started tack welding the corners down and put a couple in the center of the mount as well. I ground and machined the welds down so that the scope would fit and not look sh** either.

After all the work was done he was getting 3/4 moa with the sniper ammo. Of course being a smaller barrel it would heat up fast and goups would open up but the rifle system is capable of excellent accuracy.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

I think people buy rifles like the PSL and M76 with unreasonable expectations because it says 'sniper' on the box. It's really an AK with a longer barrel in a larger caliber, at best a DMR rifle.

My psl has put out some decent groups and my friends m76 loaded with 220? BTHP bullets shoots pretty well but it's far from a heavy barreled, free-floated AR.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

Funny you'd mention that, since many of the com-bloc countries that used the several variants of the SVD all used them in roles that were more along the lines of what we'd call a DMR rifle. The 7.62x54R is an inherently accurate cartridge, and they can be made to shoot very, very well. The platforms like this have their limitations, and I doubt you'd ever be able to get them to shoot as accurately (reliably) as a properly built M14. Still, very cool to play with!
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

The genuine m76s are worth it. The century arms are like a 30/70 hit or miss. The only Century one I had(got it because I really wanted a genuine m76 but didn't feel like paying $5,000) fired out of battery and blew up in my face damn near killing me.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Kevin Thomas</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Funny you'd mention that, since many of the com-bloc countries that used the several variants of the SVD all used them in roles that were more along the lines of what we'd call a DMR rifle. The 7.62x54R is an inherently accurate cartridge, and they can be made to shoot very, very well. The platforms like this have their limitations, and I doubt you'd ever be able to get them to shoot as accurately (reliably) as a properly built M14. Still, very cool to play with! </div></div>

mot comblock use the 7,62x54R as you mentioned but the yugoslave chambered their M76 in 8mm mauser or 7,92x57 a little more potent.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

PSL = Shit.

Its an AK on steroids, still sheet metal and rivets. Mine shot exactly like an AK. Yes it was CUGIR. Also interesting when you dent the topcover with the wrong "heavy" ammo, and realize you could potentially get a face full of carrier. Maybe I didn't give it enough time...but after shooting precision rifles, I find little satisfaction and mainly disappointment in the platform.

M76, I bought one because I loved the looks. Its a sexy rifle. Someone said, it has the ergonomics of a 2x4 and they weren't lying. Aside from my disappointment in how it handled, I could only manage to get 2-3 MOA accuracy out of it. They're confusing to buy, thanks Ohio Rapid Fire...many generations of out of spec receivers...so mine was a Wiselite Century. I was happy to sell it.

AR-10 blows the doors off of either of these. I would bet my mortgage that even a "genuine" imported $5000 M76 would be nonetheless disappointing in the accuracy department. I also disagree with the "inherent accuracy" statement about 7.62x54R. This was a comblock caliber. It had to fire reliably out of millions of rifles where in some cases quality control was virtually non-existent. Ammo was manufactured from Greece to China to each nation's specs and tolerances. Look HERE for a great comparison of all things 54R. I'm not saying that the round has no potential, I just don't understand the "inherent accuracy" statement.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

I have both the SVD and the PSL 54C and with the same ammunition, 60's dated Czech silver tip they both shoot about the same size groups @ 100 yards. I also have a ORF M76 that has been very reliable but accuracy isn't much better than the PSL or the SVD using 8mm Portuguese ammo. All 3 rifles have been very dependable and have not have a single problem with any of them. But none of them are anywhere near as accurate as My DPMS SASS, LMT MWS or Armalite AR 10A4.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

I have had a PSL, and M76. I sent the PSL to Krebs customs to have them do as much as they could to trick it out in the accuracy area. I was pleased with Krebs' work, but decent ammo just wasn't available.

I bought one of the ORF M76's, and it kept having ruptured cases with new manufactured ball ammo. I contacted ORF, and they said that they would only warranty the rifle with PMC ammo, and I couldn't even find any around here.

I bought the M76 so I could shoot ball ammo, so I tried another newer batch of ball ammo, and again had burst cases. ORF was kind enough to refund my money.

I sold the PSL after struggling with it for a year or so.

I still have my AR10 style rifle though...

If I could find a well made M76, I still think highly of the design, and cartridge. I would really enjoy trying out a Zastava/Cugir factory built rifle with good ammo, but they just aren't easy to locate. They are just about as scarce as a genuine factory built Dragunov.
 
Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: bronco_buster</div><div class="ubbcode-body">PSL = Shit.

Its an AK on steroids, still sheet metal and rivets. Mine shot exactly like an AK. Yes it was CUGIR. Also interesting when you dent the topcover with the wrong "heavy" ammo, and realize you could potentially get a face full of carrier. Maybe I didn't give it enough time...but after shooting precision rifles, I find little satisfaction and mainly disappointment in the platform.

M76, I bought one because I loved the looks. Its a sexy rifle. Someone said, it has the ergonomics of a 2x4 and they weren't lying. Aside from my disappointment in how it handled, I could only manage to get 2-3 MOA accuracy out of it. They're confusing to buy, thanks Ohio Rapid Fire...many generations of out of spec receivers...so mine was a Wiselite Century. I was happy to sell it.

AR-10 blows the doors off of either of these. I would bet my mortgage that even a "genuine" imported $5000 M76 would be nonetheless disappointing in the accuracy department. I also disagree with the "inherent accuracy" statement about 7.62x54R. This was a comblock caliber. It had to fire reliably out of millions of rifles where in some cases quality control was virtually non-existent. Ammo was manufactured from Greece to China to each nation's specs and tolerances. Look HERE for a great comparison of all things 54R. <span style="font-weight: bold">I'm not saying that the round has no potential, I just don't understand the "inherent accuracy" statement.</span> </div></div>"inherent accuracy" as to say that stubborn,well motivated,smart and ruthless people as the Finns can employ this round with real accuracy,in "their" former combloc heavy massaged and/or fully re-designed rifles_
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Re: Zastava M76 Sniper Rifle

There were around 80 preban (commercial variant) M76's imported by Mitchell Arms. There were a few post-ban models imported and etched with M90. I was lucky enough to find a NIB preban rifle with a ton of factory accessories from a collector. It had every accessory you could imagine, except no suppressor (which screws on over the flashhider like the modern AAC suppressors do.) I paid a pretty penny for the package, but at the time I was collecting preban rifles of every flavor and really wanted it. About 10-years ago, PWA imported, and sold through Southern Ohio Gun (SOG) some surplus military M76's. The one I received was in rack condition, but looked as if it was never fielded. Basicly it was identical to my Mitchells Arms rifle with the only noticable differences being the Mitchell rifle had a high-gloss deep bluing, where as the Surplus M76 was parkerized. Of course there was hardly no markings on the Surplus rifle other then the factory name, proof marks, serial number, and PWA import stamp. The glass in the fixed 6x42 scopes were fairly good for eastern-block military equipment, and the reticle was typical Soviet PSO type. The tritium in both scopes had since expired when they got in my hands, but the combat sigts still glowed dimly. Apperantly, even though ATF approved the importation of these surplus M76's, after the fact they determined they had some full auto fire control parts even though the rifle was semi-auto. So, ATF forced PWA/SOG to recall the rifles. I received a letter from SOG a couple years later asking to turn in the rifle for full refund. I heard some people didn't comply with SOG's request, but I didn't want to deal with black helecopter flying around my house in the middle of the night, so I sent my rifle back. But before I did, I shot around 200-rounds through it. With FN 70's surplus ammo, as I said earlier, accuracy was around 1-moa at best. With surplus 50's vintage yugoslavian ball, it was around 2-3 moa. I also researched and found that the rifle was produced with two different rifling twists, the faster twist was optimized for the heavier M75 sniper round. I later sold the preban M76 since I needed the money for snow removal equipment. Boy, it might not have been the most accurate rifle out there, but with the deep blue finish, and teak wood stock, it was a sexy rifle.