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#1 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: In beautiful (YOUR AREA)
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m1 garand owners..what to look for?
In the local paper here today there is an personal ad for 2 garands. It reads that these rifles are from the springfield armory and they also put the first 3 number into the serial codes follows by x's and then agin in a second set. E.G 999xxx 999xxx.
I called today and it turns out this gentleman is a collector and part of a m-1 society here locally. The 2 that he has for sale are a 1942 and a 1944 model. He's asking 650. for each. I really want to get me an m-1 as i have wanted one for a long time now. What should i look for when i go to check these rifles out? ![]() |
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#3 (permalink) | |
Crazy
Location: Near & There
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Quote:
Case in point, the FFL dealer I buy from regularly had one for sale that to my eye, looked like a fair deal. It was clean overall, the park was good and the wood was very nice too. His comment was "You really don't want that one, it's a mutt & needs work. I'll probably have to spend some money on it to be sure it doesn't come back." ![]() Not trying to scare you off, just be sure you are cautious. That said, I've got a mint National Match that is near perfect in everyway and shoots like it. It is my favorite on the range and overall, a remarkable piece of engineering. If I could only have one rifle, this would be my choice without regret. soundmotor |
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#4 (permalink) |
Junkie
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1: Op Rod. Check the op-rod and make sure it's bent. Early Garands were made with a straight op-rod, and had a nasty ( and deserved ) reputation for making their owners eat the bolt and trunnion. The problem was corrected in 1941-42, but occaisionally a rifle with the original, dangerous configuration pops up. Garand collectors, however, will pay nice money for such a weapon, so it's still an option.
2: Matching Numbers. There is no such thing as an all-matching-numbers Garand. They were cannibalized, swapper, parted-out, and tweaked so much and so often that they're all "mutt" rifles. If you -do- see a Garand that appears to be matching-numbers, don't touch it. It's been re-engraved with new ( artificial ) serial numbers, may include sketchy Chinese-made M1A parts, and it pretty much worthless anyway. |
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#5 (permalink) | |
Crazy
Location: Near & There
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Quote:
soundmotor |
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#9 (permalink) | |
Crazy
Location: Near & There
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Quote:
For the same money though you could buy an excellent, fully depreciated, now gaining, original Garand. SA also offers some kickass variations like the Scout M1-A1 (shortened M14 pattern). Also, the SA's are .308, a great caliber, the originals are .30-06. another great caliber with even more whacktion! It really comes down to what you want as they should both will shoot about the same. If the original I ended up with had not come my way, I would have bought either the SA or a Beretta BM-59 (a Beretta-made, M14 copy & oh so sweet!) soundmotor Last edited by soundmotor; 04-15-2005 at 02:38 PM.. |
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Tags |
garand, ownerswhat |
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