Dave! The mention of "Seth" set me to chuckling! I remember him well....
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Dave! The mention of "Seth" set me to chuckling! I remember him well....
Don't forgot the Ultra Rare Seth-Ola that Harlan was able to buy from Seth before Seth disappeared... ;)
IIRC Mid summer of 2015, JimF and I put a Underwood Carbine together and sent it to Harlan. I had a MU stocked, W coded Underwood barreled receiver with rear Adj sight, Type III barrel band and front sight.
Jim threw in all the internals, Sling, magazines, belt / Stock pouches. I told Harlan I had a Underwood W code receiver he could build up to lure his FFL'S address from him.
This was shortly after his Wife had sold all his carbines while he was in the hospital. We wanted him to have one him and his son could shoot and get to spending more time together. His son had started drifting away from him and we knew they both enjoyed shooting the Carbine.
He got it, Thanked us dearly. But neither Jim or I ever got any details about shooting it.
That next January we lost Harlan. Never hearing from his son.
I really miss both Harlan and Jim... :beerchug:
The SETH-OLA
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...verLarge-1.jpg
You got that right. I was a Royal Pain in the A$$ about part swapping. It finally got through my thick skull that these people were just doing what they wanted with their possessions. I predicted that all of these corrected guns would someday be out on the market with no one the wiser. The standard reply was " When I sell them, I'll put all of the old stuff back on them". Well that didn't happen, but it's none of my business anyway.
When I started this thread I had high hopes of correcting one of my two carbines back to it's org. WW-2 configuration, kinda like a before and after, BUT, when I started looking for the org. parts it would take to do this right and the asking price: Type 1 barrel band 175-$250, org. flip sight $200, front sight $90- $100 plus the tools required: front sight remove and install $50, rear sight remove and install $50 and that's not counting the small items like mag. release and safety. :eek:
Sooooo,.....that, and the expert comments here, I decided to leave it in a Korea, Vietnam era configuration, since I was lucky enough to have visited VN more then once in my younger days. But it was fun looking for the parts it would take, and to make sure the parts would be correct [U.S. M1 carbines, war time production by Graig Riesch] and this forum.
And I still think the M1 carbine is the best looking small arms the Military has ever had, and it has sure seen it's share of wars.
Here's a few pic's of mine with some of it's Vietnam items. Thanks for looking. ;)
That is still a sweet lookin' carbine!
Love the carbine and the jeep!
Honestly, I didn't believe the barrel proof was legit at the same time. And today, there is still so much I and we don't know. On swapping, it was my goal to drive people into the open doing it, instead of driving them into the shadows hiding it. We still figure out who the people doing it are, or at least which Carbines are worked over regardless of how open they are about it's condition when they got it.
After all this time I don't build much anymore. There are a few pieces that just need a stock or something but they're unique enough that I leave the probable wrong stock on them.
I have IP stuff in mid project and an M1A1 or 2. Still have an S'G' receiver from GB that has flip staking I bought to build. It's a lost cause, probably.