"THREE different 7.62 Nagant cartridges"deadeyedick wrote:These questions were asked some time back. Any help Leon ?Thanks everyone for your informative comments. From them I gather that the TOZ 36 would need a new cylinder in order to shoot .32 S&W Longs. However, I am still confused about the different original cartridges. It seems like there must be THREE different 7.62 Nagant cartridges: the original 7.62 Nagant for the 1895 (date?) Nagant revolver whose cylinder moved forward into lockup, the 7.62 Nagant Short for the TOZ 49, and the 7.62 Nagant Long for the TOZ 36? Is this correct? Do the cylinders of the TOZ 49 and 36 move forward at lockup like the old Nagant revolver's cylinder does? Are the 7.62 Nagant Short and Long cartridge bottle neck cases, like the old 7.62 Nagant? At this point, I'm mostly just curious.
Correct
"Do the cylinders of the TOZ 49 and 36 move forward at lockup"
Yes they do...this is what contributes to their fine accuracy. There is no cylinder gap and the bullet does not need to jump from the cylinder into the forcing cone- i.e. the front of the case is inserted into the barrel.
"Are the 7.62 Nagant Short and Long cartridge bottle neck cases, like the old 7.62 Nagant"
No they don't. For the 7.62 Nagant Long Toz 36 round, the projectile is seated about 13mm deep, but the rim of the case is just crimped enough to fit into the barrel mouth. For the 7.62 Nagant Short Toz49 round, the projectile is seated flush with the rim - similar to the .32 S&W L wad cutter round.