DESCRIPTION

Mosin Nagant LowPoly

1 File Included that contains:Mosin.blendMosin.fbxMosin.obj(With mtl)

Information about the Model : The 3-line rifle M1891 (Russian: трёхлинейная винтовка образца 1891 года, tryokhlineynaya vintovka obraztsa 1891 goda), colloquially known as Mosin–Nagant (Russian: винтовка Мосина, ISO 9: vintovka Mosina) is a five-shot, bolt-action, internal magazine–fed, military rifle developed from 1882 to 1891, and used by the armed forces of the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union and various other nations. It is one of the most mass-produced military bolt-action rifles in history with over 37 million units having been made since its inception in 1891, and, in spite of its age, it has been used in various conflicts around the world up to the modern day.

3-line rifle M1891/Mosin–NagantMosin Nagant series of rifles.jpgThe Mosin–Nagant series of rifles. From top to bottom:Mosin–Nagant M91Mosin–Nagant M91 DragoonMosin–Nagant M07 carbineMosin–Nagant M91/30Mosin–Nagant M91/30 PU sniperMosin–Nagant M38 carbineMosin–Nagant M44 carbineMosin–Nagant M59 carbineType Bolt-action rifle Sniper rifle (scoped rifles only)Place of origin Russian EmpireService historyIn service 1891–presentUsed by See UsersWars Philippine RevolutionFirst Italo-Ethiopian WarRusso-Japanese WarWorld War IFinnish Civil WarRussian RevolutionRussian Civil WarPolish–Soviet WarTurkish War of IndependenceChinese Civil WarSpanish Civil WarSecond Sino-Japanese WarSoviet–Japanese border conflictsWinter WarWorld War IIFirst Indochina WarKorean WarHungarian Revolution of 1956Yemeni Civil WarSino-Indian WarLaotian Civil WarVietnam WarCambodian Civil WarCambodian–Vietnamese WarThai–Laotian Border WarAfghan Civil WarSoviet–Afghan WarTuareg rebellion (1990–1995)Yugoslav WarsGeorgian Civil War[1]First and Second Chechen WarsWar in AfghanistanIraq WarRusso-Georgian WarSyrian Civil War[2][3]2014 pro-Russian conflict in UkraineWar in DonbassAnnexation of Crimea by the Russian FederationProduction historyDesigner Captain Sergei Mosin, Léon Nagant.[4]Designed 1891Manufacturer Tula, Izhevsk, Sestroryetsk, Manufacture Nationale d'Armes de Châtellerault, Remington, New England Westinghouse, many othersProduced 1891–1965No. built ~37,000,000 (Russia/Soviet Union)[citation needed]Variants see VariantsSpecificationsWeight 4 kg (8.8 lb) (M91/30)3.4 kg (7.5 lb) (M38)4.1 kg (9.0 lb) (M44)Length 1,232 mm (48.5 in) (M91/30)1,013 mm (39.9 in) (carbines)Barrel length 730 mm (29 in) (M91/30)514 mm (20.2 in) (carbines)Cartridge 7.62×54mmR (aka 7.62 Russian)7.62×53mmR (Finnish variants only)7.92×57mm Mauser (Polish variants & German captures)8×50mmR Mannlicher (Austrian capture)Action Bolt actionRate of fire VariableMuzzle velocity Light ball, ~ 865 m/s (2,838 ft/s) rifle~ 800 m/s (2,625 ft/s) carbine.Effective firing range 500 m (550 yards), 800+ m (875+ yards with optics)Feed system 5-round non-detachable magazine, loaded individually or with 5-round stripper clips.Sights Rear: ladder, graduated from 100 m to 2,000 m (M91/30) and from 100 m to 1,000 m (M38 and M44); Front: hooded fixed post (drift adjustable) PU 3.5 and PEM scope also mountedThe 3-line rifle M1891 (Russian: трёхлинейная винтовка образца 1891 года, tryokhlineynaya vintovka obraztsa 1891 goda), colloquially known as Mosin–Nagant (Russian: винтовка Мосина, ISO 9: vintovka Mosina) is a five-shot, bolt-action, internal magazine–fed, military rifle developed from 1882 to 1891, and used by the armed forces of the Russian Empire, the Soviet Union and various other nations. It is one of the most mass-produced military bolt-action rifles in history with over 37 million units having been made since its inception in 1891, and, in spite of its age, it has been used in various conflicts around the world up to the modern day.

Initial design and testsDuring the Russo-Ottoman War of 1877–1878, Russian troops armed mostly with Berdan single-shot rifles suffered heavy casualties against Turkish troops equipped with Winchester repeating rifles, particularly at the bloody Siege of Pleven. This showed Russian commanders the need to modernize the general infantry weapon of the army.

Various weapons were acquired and tested by GAU of the Ministry of Defence of Russian Empire, and in 1889 the Lebel M1886 was obtained through semi-official channels from France. It was supplied together with a model of the cartridge and bullet but without the primer and the smokeless powder. Those problems were solved by Russian scientists and engineers (the smokeless powder, for instance, was produced by Dmitri Mendeleev himself).

In 1889, three rifles were submitted for evaluation: Captain Sergei Ivanovich Mosin of the imperial army submitted his 3-line caliber (.30 cal, 7.62 mm) rifle; Belgian designer Léon Nagant submitted a 3.5-line (.35 caliber, 9 mm) design; and a Captain Zinoviev submitted another 3-line design (1 line = 1⁄10 in or 2.54 mm, thus 3 lines= 7.62 mm).

When trials concluded in 1891, the evaluators were split in their assessment. The main disadvantages of Nagant's rifle were a more complicated mechanism and a long and tiresome procedure of disassembling (which required special instruments — it was necessary to unscrew two fasteners). Mosin's rifle was mainly criticized for its lower quality of manufacture and materials, due to artisan pre-production of his 300 rifles. The commission initially voted 14 to 10 to approve Nagant's rifle. At this point the decision was made to rename the existing commission and call it Commission for creation of the small-bore rifle (Комиссия для выработки образца малокалиберного ружья), and to put on paper the final requirements for such a rifle. The inventors obliged by delivering their final designs. Head of the commission, General Chagin, ordered subsequent tests held under the commission's supervision, after which the bolt-action of Mosin's design was ordered into production under the name of 3-line rifle M1891 (трёхлинейная винтовка образца 1891 года).

REVIEWS & COMMENTS

See what other buyers think about this model - real feedback on quality,
accuracy, and usability.
There are no reviews or comments yet. Please be the first one to write it.
BEST PRICE GUARANTEED
Found this model cheaper on another marketplace? Let our support team know - we’ll match it.

Mosin-Nagant LowPoly orange rifle Low-poly 3D model

Royalty Free License
Hire
Like this model to show appreciation to the designer.
See how many times this model was viewed.
Share this model to support the designer and boost their visibility.
File formats
OBJ
OBJ | 2 files<br />File Size: 173 KB
3DS
3D Studio<br />File Size: 70.5 KB
BLEND
Blender<br />File Size: 658 KB
FBX
Autodesk FBX<br />File Size: 91.1 KB
Verified by CGTrader
Verified models are of higher quality as they have
passed CGT Standard technical and visual checks,
making them more professional-grade 3D assets.
Learn more.
FBX
This FBX file has successfully passed the CGT Standard technical and visual checks. The verification results are detailed in the section below.
File & scene
Binary FBX
Binary FBX file is more compact and faster to load and process.
Learn more
No unsupported objects
Unsupported objects:
- Lights
- Cameras
Learn more
Geometry
No N-gons
N-gons are polygons with five or more sides which might cause issues in certain processes like rendering or animation. Learn more
No faceted geometry
Faceted geometry uses flat surfaces without smoothing, which can look unrealistic on curves.
Learn more
Manifold geometry
Manifold geometry ensures all surfaces are properly connected, avoiding issues like edges shared by more than two faces.
Learn more
Textures & material
PBR textures
PBR textures simulate how light interacts with materials, making the model look realistic under different lighting.
Required PBR textures:
- Base Color
- Roughness
- Metalness
- Normal
Learn more
No embed textures
Embedded textures are stored inside the model file, increasing its size and sometimes causing compatibility issues.
Learn more
Square textures
Texture aspect ratio is the width-to-height ratio of a texture. Expected texture aspect ratio: 1:1
Learn more
Power of 2 texture sizes
Textures with dimensions in power of two (e.g. 512x512px, 1024x1024px) are used to optimize performance and memory usage.
Learn more
Assigned materials
Materials are applied to the 3D model to allow visualize a model's surface properties and appearance.
Learn more
UVs & naming
No UV overlaps
UVs overlap when multiple points on the 3D model's surface are mapped to the same point on the UV island causing texture stretching.
Learn more
UV unwrapped model
A UV unwrapped model means its 3D surface is flattened into 2D space, allowing textures to be applied accurately.
Learn more
Allowed characters
Allowed ASCII characters: a-zA-Z0-9-_
Learn more
Provided by designer
Information and details shared directly by the model's designer.
3D Features
The model includes animations (movement or actions) that can be played in supported software or engines.
The model has a skeleton or bone structure, making it ready for posing or animation.
PBR
Uses Physically Based Rendering materials, which give the model realistic lighting and surface properties.
Textures
The model includes image files (textures) that add color, patterns, or detail to its surfaces.
Materials
The model has material settings that define how surfaces look (color, shine, transparency, etc.).
UV Mapping
The model's surfaces are mapped to a 2D image, allowing textures to display correctly.
Plugins Used
Some external plugins were used to create the model. These may be required for full functionality.
3D printing
Indicates whether the designer marked this model as suitable for 3D printing.
Model is not 3D printable
The designer indicates this model is intended for digital use only (rendering, animation, or AR/VR) and not for 3D printing.
Geometry
Polygon mesh
A model built from polygons (triangles or quads) connected in a mesh.
1801 polygons
The total number of polygons (flat shapes) that make up the 3D model.
/ 2243 vertices
The number of points (corners) that define the shape of the model's polygons.
Unwrapped UVs
Publish date
Model ID
Chat