Great start! The rifle in the first photo, (for those of you who might be interested in weapons), is a Soviet-designed SKS. It fires the same projectile as the AK-47 (7,62x39mm), however, it is semi-automatic and only has a magazine capacity of 10 rounds. I used to own one back when I lived in Texas and sold it to a friend from the Army.
Those old Soviet rifles are reliable but agricultural. My old Mosin-Nagants are even worse (probably) than the SKS. Operating one is like working a recalcitrant 70-year old tractor designed to be operated by illiterate peasants that fights you every step of the way but just won't die. What immediately leapt out at me in that shot was the incongruous "Datsun" sticker on the Capri. But I digress.
Anyway, here's something from my archives, probably circa 1990 or so. Originally color, converted.
That's cool that you owned Mosin-Nagants. I tried a couple, even a "polished" one and didn't care much for them. I'd rather use something like the Mauser K98 with that sweet bolt action. I don't own any bolt-action rifles anymore, but I do keep a pump-action shotgun with some birdshot under my bed, in case someone tries to break-in, or, climb the balcony railing and open the sliding door. After all, regardless of how much gentrification is advancing, Philadelphia is still a dangerous city.
I love those F-14s. The Tomcats, (Top-gun aside) were some of the best looking planes IMO. Back in Venezuela I used to see the F-16As, and then the SU-30s flying all the time.
Birdshot is the way to go - no worry of shooting through walls.
I have the M-Ns more for their history than anything else, though I've put plenty of rounds through them over the years. The Finn captures are really interesting, and shoot better too. Imagine the history of a rifle produced in Imperial Russia, then used by the Soviets, and then captured and reworked by the Finns to be used against its previous owners. It's quite incredible, really.
Mausers are great - generally the smoothest are the pre-98 actions, the 95 and 96. The Swedish target 96s are lovely to shoot and astonishingly accurate over long ranges. I'm also a big fan of the gloriously intricate Swiss straight-pull actions.
I'll stop interjecting the firearms discussion into the otherwise pacific realm of the weekend thread now. Apologies for the tangent.