1129

DESIRABLE CHINESE ARSENAL 626 "1952" DATE TYPE 50

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military Start Price:12,500.00 USD Estimated At:25,000.00 - 35,000.00 USD
DESIRABLE CHINESE ARSENAL 626  1952  DATE TYPE 50
CURRENT BID
0.00USD
ENTER YOUR MAXIMUM ABSENTEE BID[?]
You must bid at least
12,500.00USD
USD
12,500.00 x 1 unit = 12,500.00USDApplicable fees & taxes are added at checkout.
[?]Live Online Auction Starts In 2026 Aug 05 @ 10:00 (UTC-04:00 : AST/EDT)
SUBMACHINE GUN. Cal. 7.62 (7.62x25mm Tokarev). S# 626. Bbl. 10 5/8". An iconic submachine gun of World War II, the PPSh-41 and its iterations proved an invaluable small arm utilized by the Soviet Union throughout the course of the war, with roughly 5,000,000 produced by the wars end. During the early years of the Cold War, the Soviet Union, on top of supplying PPSh-41s, licensed production of the PPSh-41 to the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) under the designation "Type 50", which would see extensive use by the PLA (People's Liberation Army), KPA (Korean People's Army), and PAVN forces in both the Korean and Vietnam Wars. The Type 50 was mfg. at Arsenal / Factory 626 (under the guise of "Qinghau Tool Company") in the town of Bei'an in the Heilongjiang province of China. Large scale production began in 1951 in response towards the United Nations involvement in Korea, with production terminating in 1953 (due to the adoption of the Type 54), with only 358,000 units being produced. This example is marked with Hanzi characters denoting "Type 50", above "626" and the year of production "1952" on top of the upper assembly. Otherwise, this example is virtually devoid of any other identifying markings, save for several small scattered proof marks. Metal components exhibit a blue finish overall, with an area of a black enamel type finish present above the aforementioned receiver markings. 1-piece sanded and refinished plain wood pistol grip stock with steel trapdoor buttplate. Hooded post front sight with flip-up dual aperture rear sight. Pressed resin bolt buffer is present. All serialized parts are matching via "1954", and include the lower, bolt, and trigger guard. Consignor indicates that this example was brought back from Vietnam by Inspector Chris Mathiesen of the Warwick, RI police department. MAGS: x1 35-rd. steel box mag. and x1 MP40 blued steel 32-rd mag. marked "kur" (Steyr) "43" and with an Eagle/WaA815 on the rear. MP40 mag. is accompanied by a reproduction blued steel mag. adapter for the PPSh platform (Note: this example is chambered for 7.62x25mm ammunition and will not function with the MP40 mag.). CONDITION: metal components retain large amounts to the majority of their blue finish, exhibiting some areas of wear and thinning that are fading to gray patina, with moderate pitting present beneath the finish on the upper assembly. Bore exhibits scattered spots of light to mild pitting, as well as streaks of dark moderate pitting along the edges of the lands, while retaining trace rifling throughout. Proper manual mechanics. Stock shows some scattered marks and impressions from handling and storage, tight hairline cracks at the top tang and otherwise sound. PROVENANCE: Military Museum Collection of Shooters Outpost, Hooksett NH. THIS IS A NATIONAL FIREARMS ACT CURIO & RELIC MACHINE GUN REQUIRING BATF TRANSFER BEFORE TAKING POSSESSION. FULLY TRANSFERABLE. (03-2151/MLW). CURIO. CLASS III. $25,000-35,000.