You guys are right, I put it back like it was, and it will stay that way, thanks for being so honest in your comments, all good reasons. Thank you all for helping me ;).
Here's a few pic's of it after I put it back together and cleaned it up.
Printable View
You guys are right, I put it back like it was, and it will stay that way, thanks for being so honest in your comments, all good reasons. Thank you all for helping me ;).
Here's a few pic's of it after I put it back together and cleaned it up.
It looks fine like that, at least you have one.
Looks great. You mentioned 'maybe I was wrong about the WWII era?'. No, it is a WWII carbine and I think it may be in the serial number range of the first run of M1A1s. All carbines were made during WWII. But having been overhauled and updated while it was in service, it would take an expensive restoration to put it back into original condition. As it is, you still have an honest M1A1 that has some good value which is only going to go up.
Inland,
Thank's for the kind words and good advice. I went back and try'd to find what you are talking about [maybe you was wrong about the WW 2 era ?] if I made a mistake. I did not mean to, prob. just my poor grammar ;).
This is a great forum, and so many of you guy's that know your carbines, you guy's sure saved me from making a big mistake.
Very Nice! Not a thing wrong with that sweet weapon!
imarangemaster,
Thank's for posting the pic. of Gen. Schwarzkopf, but i'm thinking that M1A1/M2 prob. belonged to the RVN paratrooper in the middle he was helping. and Schwarzkopf being a Lt. would have carried a 1911 most of the time.
Many of the RVN troop's carried the M1's and their paratroopers loved the folding stock with the M1 or M2. it would help if we knew the year of the pic. many M1's, M1A1's, and M2's were issued to the RVN.
But, I've been wrong many time's before. :thup:
bar,
Thank's for that info. that makes owning a M1A1 even more interesting. :thup:
I am going to the range tomorrow to see how it shoot's, I just hope it shoot's as good as my Quality Hardware does.
If all goes well, I will clean it, and into the display case it goes in my little comp. room. :madsmile:
It was Norman's. If you look close, he has 30 rounders in his jungle fatigue breast pocket. I also read something years ago where he referred to his "paratrooper" carbine he used in Vietnam. IIRC, he was talking about it being a lot of firepower if things got "close and stupid," or something like that. It was around the time of Desert Storm (1990/1991) that I read it in print media.