-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Any way to ID a NM rifle made by a specific unit?
I wanted to see if I could get some info or help IDing a garand I looked at today and may purchase.
I didnt have my camera with me so I couldnt get any pics but I wrote down some of the info.
SA 4.3 mil conversion to 7.62 marked in silver on top of the front of the receiver. It also looks like it has a faint 7.62 stamped in the flat of the receiver behind the rear sight. NM rear sight and the front sight is marked .62 on the side.
Stock(Birch) has been glass bedded, the bedding is a dark brown color not the yellowish color that is on my NM M1
. The top of the hammer has been polished. The sear has been ground down to a sharp angle. The bottom of the barrel near the receiver has been polished, no markings on the side of the barrel. The front hand guard(walnut) has been screwed to the lower band and it looks like the screw heads have been ground flat.
The story I was told is that the mans dad received this garand when he retired from the Corps around 1969. He was the OIC at the armory on Quantico?
It was in a hard rifle case and on the cover was stenciled G.F. Kenner USMC
I was curious if you knew if this practice was going on at the time? His son does not have any paperwork just what his dad had told him.
Thanks for any info
Chris
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. |
|
-
08-12-2009 09:38 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed

Originally Posted by
CSM14thBN
I wanted to see if I could get some info or help IDing a garand I looked at today and may purchase.
I didnt have my camera with me so I couldnt get any pics but I wrote down some of the info.
SA 4.3 mil conversion to 7.62 marked in silver on top of the front of the receiver. It also looks like it has a faint 7.62 stamped in the flat of the receiver behind the rear sight. NM rear sight and the front sight is marked .62 on the side.
Stock(Birch) has been glass bedded, the bedding is a dark brown color not the yellowish color that is on my NM
M1
. The top of the hammer has been polished. The sear has been ground down to a sharp angle. The bottom of the barrel near the receiver has been polished, no markings on the side of the barrel. The front hand guard(walnut) has been screwed to the lower band and it looks like the screw heads have been ground flat.
The story I was told is that the mans dad received this garand when he retired from the Corps around 1969. He was the OIC at the armory on Quantico?
It was in a hard rifle case and on the cover was stenciled G.F. Kenner USMC
I was curious if you knew if this practice was going on at the time? His son does not have any paperwork just what his dad had told him.
Thanks for any info
Chris
CSM,
You have personal mail incoming.
-
-
Legacy Member
Smaj, please share with us what you find out. These stories are interesting.
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
-
Legacy Member
I would have expected a USGI 7.62mm barrel. A little odd not to see that. 1970 had piles of USGI barrels in regular inventory.
-
-
Legacy Member
It looks USAF. USAF loved to polish the underside "op rod" area of the barrel like that, and loved the high gloss urethane stock finish. Maybe it was done by an armorer "inspired" by the USAF....
I agree commercial bbl. unusual in that time frame...
-