Me thinks it has some commercial parts on and in it.Information
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Me thinks it has some commercial parts on and in it.Information
Warning: This is a relatively older thread
This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current.
The trigger housing has the correct marking for a late part. Inland has some very light part stampings. The recoil plate will probably have a very faint DI on the hidden part for Dayton Racquet/Inland.
You have to really look closely. The marks are probably there you just aren't seeing them. I remember when BQ walked me through my Winchester, I had not seen anything and then there was light.
"EI" is probably Eaton Pond for Inland. The M on the mag catch is for not a makers mark.
Last edited by DaveHH; 03-12-2021 at 08:03 PM.
Hello Dave,
To find stock, barrel and internal parts marks I used as support my cel camera zoom 5X, so Im 99% pretty sure theres no more marks than the others that I had mention. In fact as you see in the pictures the color metal from the receiver is different than the other parts, the parts and the stock for my point of veiw seems to be pretty newer than the receiver.
Regards
Eddie
With all due respect Eddie, you missed the Inland mark on the trigger housing. Inlands are finished as an assembled unit. An Inland barrel and receiver will have an almost black finish and will have a shadow at the point where the barrel enters the receiver, this is where the band is moved to before the final finish is applied. The top of the receiver will also be sand blasted and have another shadow visible on the side where the rough surface and smooth surfaces meet. The number is a #5.4 which is a mid to late 1944 carbine. The trigger housing Inland mark is vertical which makes it probably original to the gun. You may just have a mostly matching carbine that has had the barrel replaced. The stock has what appears to be a cartouche just forward of the oval slot. It could be a Winchester stock as many Win stocks have zero markings in the left side cut out. Regardless, the checkering makes it a nice oddity and a zero collectable. The barrel definitely doesn't look like an Inland. They have a swaged on gas cylinder and it has a very distinct
looking seal at the front of the gas cylinder. Your barrel is probably from some other company or place. Not all barrels are marked beyond a proof mark . NPM proofs with a single punch mark. A Winchester barrel can have a faint W and a very faint Win Proof. Have you disassembled the trigger group and checked the hammer, sear and recoil plate? My inland is also a 5.4 and has a recoil plate mark that is almost invisible.
Last edited by DaveHH; 03-13-2021 at 01:56 PM.