Black Blade
12th September 2012, 02:08 AM
PTR-91 (HK-91 Clone)
The design is a variation of the Heckler and Koch G3 rifle. These rifles are produced by PTR-91 Inc. (formerly JLD Enterprises) of Farmington, Connecticut. The abbreviation PTR stands for "Precision Target Rifle". The weapon is based on the Heckler & Koch G3/HK91 (the HK91 is the semi-automatic version) design used by many militaries around the globe, which itself is a variant of the Spanish-made CETME rifle. The assault weapons ban of 1994 (which expired in 2004) prohibited certain cosmetic features of the HK91, meaning that it could no longer be manufactured and sold to the US civilian market in its original configuration. Furthermore, the German-made HK91 was specifically prohibited from importation under the 1989 Import Ban. Subsequently Heckler and Koch ceased manufacture of the semi-automatic HK91, and since then civilian versions of the G3 have increased in collector value. The PTR-91 was developed to fill the void, as the two rifles are almost identical.
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/584364871e0bd0d8cbd1d6b4b6e4d93b01a86568_r.jpg http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/0ae360731be2dcc5c648d5f0b12bda2d421ac0dc_r.jpg
PTR-91 (top) and CETME (middle and bottom)
I picked up a PTR-91 with the classic wood stock this week. It arrived with the claw mount and one magazine. I have a couple dozen surplus aluminum G3 magazines I bought for about a buck each and a few steel magazines for a couple bucks each from Cheaper Than Dirt.
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/5e516112d3cedeb3db3dfb32c3307f9a0b6e6a97_r.jpg
I then went to the gun club to test fire the weapon for functionality. It was mostly cloudy, a nice 67F and no wind.
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/4a9361ba15a9d908cd04d9debfc4d2eb2954baec_r.jpg
I hung a couple targets downrange as I bought two boxes of Winchester .308 (150 gr and 180 gr).
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/9781681addced6b4d43d59e615a299ae9d270a34_r.jpg
I was more interested to see how well the rifle functioned so I used open sights on both targets.
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/3171611ddac3dbbcd90a00e9b6723316da15bd7b_r.jpg http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/21626691f3dd7c9dda8b60dd0785275b46ef8a0e_r.jpg
I fired the first box (150 gr) and had shot low on the target. After adjusting the rear sight I hit in the black, I then fired the second box (180 gr) and had a tighter grouping.
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/ac51651ddbc3d3b4debee348421ef42da8881607_r.jpg
From the brass I was able to find it would appear that aside from the flute marks the dents made these unsuitable for reloading. I will likely use milsurp and Russian steel cased ammo for practice and to save my brass cased ammo for my other rifles.
Overall I was quite pleased with how well the rifle functioned. I decided that I "needed" a PTR-91 to fill out my collection a little more and a HK-91 in excellent condition is very expensive. The PTR-91 is essentially the same gun at a third (or less) the price of a pre-ban HK-91.
- Black Blade
http://www.ptr91.com/products/
The design is a variation of the Heckler and Koch G3 rifle. These rifles are produced by PTR-91 Inc. (formerly JLD Enterprises) of Farmington, Connecticut. The abbreviation PTR stands for "Precision Target Rifle". The weapon is based on the Heckler & Koch G3/HK91 (the HK91 is the semi-automatic version) design used by many militaries around the globe, which itself is a variant of the Spanish-made CETME rifle. The assault weapons ban of 1994 (which expired in 2004) prohibited certain cosmetic features of the HK91, meaning that it could no longer be manufactured and sold to the US civilian market in its original configuration. Furthermore, the German-made HK91 was specifically prohibited from importation under the 1989 Import Ban. Subsequently Heckler and Koch ceased manufacture of the semi-automatic HK91, and since then civilian versions of the G3 have increased in collector value. The PTR-91 was developed to fill the void, as the two rifles are almost identical.
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/584364871e0bd0d8cbd1d6b4b6e4d93b01a86568_r.jpg http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/0ae360731be2dcc5c648d5f0b12bda2d421ac0dc_r.jpg
PTR-91 (top) and CETME (middle and bottom)
I picked up a PTR-91 with the classic wood stock this week. It arrived with the claw mount and one magazine. I have a couple dozen surplus aluminum G3 magazines I bought for about a buck each and a few steel magazines for a couple bucks each from Cheaper Than Dirt.
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/5e516112d3cedeb3db3dfb32c3307f9a0b6e6a97_r.jpg
I then went to the gun club to test fire the weapon for functionality. It was mostly cloudy, a nice 67F and no wind.
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/4a9361ba15a9d908cd04d9debfc4d2eb2954baec_r.jpg
I hung a couple targets downrange as I bought two boxes of Winchester .308 (150 gr and 180 gr).
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/9781681addced6b4d43d59e615a299ae9d270a34_r.jpg
I was more interested to see how well the rifle functioned so I used open sights on both targets.
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/3171611ddac3dbbcd90a00e9b6723316da15bd7b_r.jpg http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/21626691f3dd7c9dda8b60dd0785275b46ef8a0e_r.jpg
I fired the first box (150 gr) and had shot low on the target. After adjusting the rear sight I hit in the black, I then fired the second box (180 gr) and had a tighter grouping.
http://images.yuku.com/image/jpg/ac51651ddbc3d3b4debee348421ef42da8881607_r.jpg
From the brass I was able to find it would appear that aside from the flute marks the dents made these unsuitable for reloading. I will likely use milsurp and Russian steel cased ammo for practice and to save my brass cased ammo for my other rifles.
Overall I was quite pleased with how well the rifle functioned. I decided that I "needed" a PTR-91 to fill out my collection a little more and a HK-91 in excellent condition is very expensive. The PTR-91 is essentially the same gun at a third (or less) the price of a pre-ban HK-91.
- Black Blade
http://www.ptr91.com/products/