Originally Posted by
Rick B
I doubt the barrel warped from heat. I bet it was from the hand guards being to tight.
As for the Johnson. It had a tube loaded spring for the bolt that was built into the wooden stock just like the M16 which Melvin Johnson worked on with Stoner as his bolt design was carried over also. If the stock was off the rifle it was useless. The two small screws that hold the stock on the Johnson were and still are prone to cracking the stock as they come loose from firing. Recoil then rattles the stock and crack it goes. This cracks it right down the middle thru the end at the drum magazine and also up top rearwards at the bolt cover. These cracks are on more than 80% of all Johnson’s I have seen and the only repairs I have had to do to every one I have worked on. This is not considering the men falling on the rifle as taught with the butt end down first. The Johnson rifle would have surely broken and been of no use in combat.
I love the Johnson rifle for plinking as it is accurate as heck but it would have never made it in combat and that is a fact not a opinion.
Rick B