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Is this M1D Authentic?
I would like some opinions on its authenticity.
The only M1D rifles I've seen with serial numbers of the scope and receiver stamped on the stock were from Taiwan.
Another fellow mentioned that the Hong Kong Police did the same thing.
I've never seen it on a Dane M1D or the other US M1D I owned previously.
The rifle was originally built in 1943 and has the had the molten lead dip treatment.
All parts, including the barrel are SA, which is S-A 53. The only parts not SA are the trigger group. The bore is pristine.
I have no provenance or story to go with the rifle.
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02-08-2010 02:10 PM
# ADS
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Have never seen a staking on the attachment knob like that
Hinge pin on the mount - the ends should be rounded - can not tell
If the T37 has a casting ridge around the clearance for the cylinder lock screw then it is a fake T-37
a D barrel will have a 555 in the drawing number
the 6-53 on the pad looks odd - like it was hand drawn
Are there any marks on the receiver leg?
Many will not value a undocumented M1D
He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose
There are no great men, only great challenges that ordinary men are forced by circumstances to meet.
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Just has the look of a modern re-creation. My M1D came out of Canada
20 years ago. It looks nothing like the one in question.
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This M1D is in Canada
. M1Ds are very scarce in Canada
.
The stamps on the cheek pad are definitely stamped, not drawn.
No casting ridge around the clearance for the lock screw
There is no 555 in the drawing number. I'm a little surprised at this one, I was under the impression that M1Ds were assembled from regular run of the mill rifles that had proven to be extraordinarily accurate, much like the British
No4 T.
I will take a few more pics and see if I can impose on Badger to post more.
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More pics .....
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M1d
The barrel drawing number ending in 555 should be UNDER the rear handguard on top of the barrel. It appears your scope mount does have rounded ends on the hinge pin so I would say it is genuine USGI. Without paperwork to substantiate the rifle you will always be told it is worth the value of the parts. It could be a genuine USGI M1D but without definitive paperwork to prove it you have what must be assumed to be a parts rifle.
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I can understand where your coming from mollydodger but in Canada
we don't have the benefit of CMP
. I'm very surprised that there isn't a lot more interest or knowledge about M1D rifles than seems to be available on the web.
To rely on CMP provenance is OK but it certainly leaves a lot to be desired. The US either loaned, leased or sold M1D rifles all over the world, including Canada, Denmark
, England
, Hong Kong, Korea, Viet Nam, Thailand, Taiwan, Norway
, etc. Some of these nations, like Canada, just kept them in storage and other than to play with a few of them, never used them. Most went to Denmark in the mid fifties in a large sale. To nullify their existence by only accepting CMP provenance is like cutting off you nose to spite your face.
I guess you have a lot of rifles made up from parts in the US and it makes sense that it happens, given the availability of parts and the "mystique" of owning a sniper. It's to bad that the practise is so wide spread as to have an entire country rejecting the other rifles, just because they don't have CMP provenance. In other countries, the parts availability to make up these fakes is almost, if not nil.
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Deceased
I have a Danish
M1D. It has the Berretta FKF receiver, bolt and trigger group. Barrel is SA555 and as new. M84 is Danish crown marked. Wood is GI. flash hider GI. Pad GI. OriginalM1D rifle receiver could not be imported due to lend lease regs.. so It came back all apart as a kit. I built it and it's not for sale. There are no original Danish issue M1D that I have seen. if I need a sniper, I'll use my M76 Zastava in 7.92. The best I have used. Gary
Last edited by arado; 02-12-2010 at 05:10 PM.
Reason: mistake correction in royal numerology...
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Originally Posted by
bearhunter
I can understand where your coming from mollydodger but in
Canada
we don't have the benefit of
CMP
. I'm very surprised that there isn't a lot more interest or knowledge about M1D rifles than seems to be available on the web.
To rely on CMP provenance is OK but it certainly leaves a lot to be desired. The US either loaned, leased or sold M1D rifles all over the world, including Canada,
Denmark
,
England
, Hong Kong, Korea, Viet Nam, Thailand, Taiwan,
Norway
, etc. Some of these nations, like Canada, just kept them in storage and other than to play with a few of them, never used them. Most went to Denmark in the mid fifties in a large sale. To nullify their existence by only accepting CMP provenance is like cutting off you nose to spite your face.
I guess you have a lot of rifles made up from parts in the US and it makes sense that it happens, given the availability of parts and the "mystique" of owning a sniper. It's to bad that the practise is so wide spread as to have an entire country rejecting the other rifles, just because they don't have CMP provenance. In other countries, the parts availability to make up these fakes is almost, if not nil.
All M1D's are "made up from parts". The provenance is only to prove who put the parts together. The CMP/DCM is the best, if not only, documented way to prove it was done at a U.S. arsenal.
Last edited by Devil Dog; 02-11-2010 at 06:58 PM.
Reason: correct spelling
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I have a Danish M1-D...

Originally Posted by
arado
I have a
Danish
M1D. It has the Berretta KFK receiver, bolt and trigger group. Barrel is SA555 and as new. M84 is Danish crown marked. Wood is GI. flash hider GI. Pad GI. OriginalM1D rifle receiver could not be imported due to lend lease regs.. so It came back all apart as a kit. I built it and it's not for sale. There are no original Danish issue M1D that I have seen. if I need a sniper, I'll use my M76 Zastava in 7.92. The best I have used. Gary
Arado, I have a complete, original issue Danish M1
-D... They do exist...