I picked up a WASR 10 a few weeks ago and took it out for a rough zero & function check. My '200 yard line' has a fence in the way that makes it 195 yards per Google Earth. This includes several sight adjustments and is about typical for an unrefined, basic AKM clone. Tula FMJ was used.

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I find it impossible to get a good shoulder mount with with the basic Romanian AK stock, so a UTG pad is going on it. This one has a light but long, creepy Tapco G2 which renders it effecively a double-action. A Red Star two-stage trigger is in the works. In the interim, I chucked the front sight (which resembled the Michelin Man more than anything else) in a drill and turned it down to 0.055” and plugged the UTG pad on.

I tried a Mojo 'Click' sight, which a direct replacement for the standard AK rear and it adds about an inch to the sight radius.

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I started getting 195 yard, 3 shot groups where a couple are snuggled right together and the 3rd wanders off 6 or 7 inches. I've been shooting with my glasses on, to keep that damn little bowl from dividing diagonally; but the front sight fuzzes on me after 20 rounds or so. This long, unpredictable trigger ain't helping; but I think the rifle is mechanically accurate, given the platform.

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The crown in Romanian AK's usually looks like it was done by a drunk monkey with a chainsaw file. This is not conductive to accuracy and I correct them by running a fine silicon carbide ball in the muzzle at low RPM, followed by the same tool wrapped in 400 and 600 paper. I stop when I have a visible bevel that kisses the rifling. The thing to remember here is to go slow and careful. If you do, you will always turn out a better crown than what came on the gun.

Now I have a gift for getting the worst example of any product and unfortunately, this manifested itself in the Mojo click sight. The damn thing walked windage on me and I was soon back to the standard rear sight. 'Einheit' over at Soviet-Steel.com suggested the 'fuzzing' that occurs with AK sights is caused by too many right angles at the top of the sight; and this is easily cured by breaking the top of the notch. I took a small, round Swiss file to this one and it sharpened the front post right up.

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And it worked pretty good. I shot this target at 195 yards while checking zero with three loads. Tula FMJ ("T"), Barnaul Silver Bear SP ("BSB") and Barnaul Golden Bear SP ("BSB"). 

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Next came the Red Star Trigger which I installed, adjusted and meticulously double-checked as I proceeded. This is an engineering marvel for AK platform rifles, fully adjustable for one or two stage function, pre-travel, over-travel, sear engagement and weight of the second stage. I set it up as a two stage. The only modification necessary was the removal of a few thousandths from the safety to clear the trigger tail. 

The resulting trigger reminds me of a good 1903 Springfield trigger more than anything else. It has about 3 3/4 pounds of take-up and I left quite a bit of that. The second stage is definite and breaks crisply a 4 1/2 pounds. I set the over-travel stop with a tad of free play, just to ensure everything had room to crud up. Then I yanked the trigger back out, douched it with carb cleaner and blue-Loctited all the settings. When the Loctite set I function checked it with 2, 3, 4 and on up through 10 rounds in the magazine. This provided an opportunity for some offhand shooting at random small targets to 50 yards.

Damn, what an improvement. I couldn't miss a small Rem Oil can at 25-30 yards and even hit the end of it twice. At distance, the difference is amazing. Two days ago I was glad to just hit the 'tin man' from an improvised rest at 195 yards. With the Red Star Trigger installed, I could hammer his 4x6 inch head at that distance. This poor old "inaccurate AK" is out-shooting my lever actions.

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Last edited by SargeMO; 06/23/16. Reason: sperring

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