RUSSIAN PPSH CLEANING ROD LIKE NEW
Out of stock
- SKU
- 19781050
- Color
- Black
- Style
- Gun Gear, Gun Parts
Description
Round out your Soviet small-arms accessory wall with an authentic Russian PPSh-41 cleaning rod in like-new, unissued surplus condition. This is the original field-maintenance tool that came with the iconic World War II–era PPSh-41 submachine gun, and it remains a must-have piece for any collector, reenactor, or shooter restoring or maintaining one of these legendary blowback subguns.
The rod is built from solid blued steel with a slim shaft, an eyelet at the top end for patches or pull-throughs, and a flat T-shaped foot at the base that doubles as a screwdriver/combination tool for breaking the weapon down in the field. The two-piece construction lets the rod separate for compact storage in a kit, ammo pouch, or display case, then assemble quickly when it's time to clean the chrome-lined bore.
Why It Sells
PPSh-41 collectors, Eastern Front reenactors, and Cold War surplus enthusiasts are constantly hunting for the small original accessories that complete a rifle or submachine gun setup. Original Soviet rods like this — unissued and still in their factory finish — are increasingly hard to source, which makes them a strong impulse-add at the counter and an easy cross-sell alongside PPSh magazines, slings, pouches, and Mosin/SKS accessories.
Key Features
- Genuine Russian military surplus — original issue, not a reproduction
- Purpose-built for the PPSh-41 submachine gun
- Solid blued steel construction for long service life
- Two-piece design separates for compact storage and reassembles for full reach into the bore
- Eyelet tip accepts cleaning patches; flat foot serves as a combination tool/screwdriver
- Like-new, unissued condition — may show light storage marks consistent with surplus age
Who It's For
- PPSh-41 owners and shooters needing a correct-pattern field rod
- WWII and Cold War Soviet reenactors completing a kit
- Military surplus collectors and museum/display builders
- Retailers stocking Mosin, SKS, and Soviet small-arms accessory walls