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1944 Springfield Armory Garand
Last edited by Aragorn243; 06-26-2014 at 07:07 PM.
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06-26-2014 07:01 PM
# ADS
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From what I see it looks like a nice honest rebuild. The only thing that jumps out at me that may be a potential problem is the wear on the trigger guard trunnions and the wood looks worn/compressed where the receiver fits. How is the lock up? You should begin to feel resistance when the guard is about half way closed. If it closes with little or no resistance it will affect the accuracy big time. Put a dab of grease on each trunnion to reduce wear and don't disassemble any more than necessary.
Get hold of a copy of FM 23-5 and this will tell all you need to know about disassembly and maintenance.
If you plan on keeping it ''original'' use only M-2 ammo or commercial stuff loaded to M-2 spec. I've never tried any but the reviews on the PRVI Garand load says it's good stuff.
Stick with milsurp clips, some of the after market ones are junk.
Nice find at a good price, congratulations.
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Lock up is very tight, can't get it open without putting something through the hole. It does not have a lot of resistance when closing. Should I build that up with something? I bought a bunch of USGI clips about three months ago. Figured I'd need them at some point.
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I have been lirking waiting on the pictures. Glaring deficiencies? It is yours and not mine. Nice unmolested apperance save the sanding & good bore $680 is a good deal in my area. I would have paid it.Seen your magic, Ill bet that lumber will look great with a little love. There is so much to know about the Garand to keep from taking a beating when purchasing one I gave up & went the CMP route for my first before the stores are exausted. Most of the ones I have examined at shows seem to be either streight from CMP with a large markup or bitsters made up from from Garand collecters parts bins. Ill have to keep studing and keep eyes open for a WWII vintage rifle.
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Originally Posted by
Aragorn243
Should I build that up with something?
I used two strips of cork gasket material "auto parts store" to tighten mine up. Another thing is to peen the splines if there's ANY movement, which I also had to do,huge improvement in accuracy after those two things. Welcome to the Garand owners club..
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To me, one of the really informative things in this issue was the fact that an importer's stamp could deform the barrel and destroy accuracy. I've seen hundreds of them so stamped.
Real men measure once and cut.
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By lock up I was referring to the amount of force required to close the guard. It's normal for the guard to be somewhat difficult to open as there's a lip on the bow that locks the guard to the housing preventing it from opening under recoil.
As I said earlier you should begin to feel resistance when the guard is about half way closed and it should take a fair bit of force to close it all the way.
There's several ways to fix this, bed it, shim it or replace the trigger guard. Also, I've heard of building the trunnions up with a dab of weld and filing or milling them back round.
I've always used thin strips of walnut or white oak glued to the bottom of the stock where the trigger assembly mates up to shim mine. Pressed paper gasket stock of the type used in shim gaskets may also work but I'd think cork or other soft materials wouldn't last very long.
As to peening the gas cylinder splines goes I was told by a former USMC armourer friend to peen the top spline only. The reasoning behind this is that by doing the top one only it will pull the cylinder up tight against the gas port on the bottom of the barrel resulting in a better seal.
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Thank You to vintage hunter For This Useful Post:
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To me, one of the really informative things in this issue was the fact that an importer's stamp could deform the barrel and destroy accuracy. I've seen hundreds of them so stamped.
Now that you are here thanks for your contribution to the GCA Journal.
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To me, one of the really informative things in this issue was the fact that an importer's stamp could deform the barrel and destroy accuracy. I've seen hundreds of them so stamped.
Seven photos up from the bottom is the import stamp. It's stamped so lightly I'm not too concerned with damage. Only the top third of the letters show. They are centered in the exposed barrel section just below the shine.
I spent the last three hours cleaning up the metal. Came out nice. No surprises, got all the major parts separated. Still not going to mess with the trigger assembly but did find another SA marked part in there. No NM star or wording on the barrel, had hopes but figured chances were near zero.
The wood will be my weekend project.
I like the idea of walnut shims, they should blend in nicely and I think I have a piece of it in the basement. Probably won't do anything like that until I shoot it however and see if it needs it.
What type sling should I get for it? Leather was used throughout the war I guess but canvas became more common toward the end?
I have the bayonet.
Last edited by Aragorn243; 06-26-2014 at 10:56 PM.
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