Rare Early WW2 Springfield M1 Garand Follower with non angled follower | eBayInformation
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Rare Early WW2 Springfield M1 Garand Follower with non angled follower | eBayInformation
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Warning: This is a relatively older thread
This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current.
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.
The slide is way earlier than the late body, they don't go together.
Real men measure once and cut.
Good catch Bob!
I can see that the early top hat is not there - never knew about a straight back slide - when was this used - model shop rifle ? Earlier
Here are two recent photos from the owner of Winchester s/n 100,001. Winchester also used the early follower and 20 degree rear and 45 degree front slide.
Winchester soon replaced the early slide with a 45 X 45 slide which was unique only to Winchester production, this lasted to around mid 1941Attachment 119088Attachment 119089Attachment 119090
Last edited by RCS; 08-06-2021 at 07:52 AM.
Over the years I have seen three or four later followers with the early slide. Always loose in parts bins, never on a rifle. Other than that, I know nothing else about these anomalies.
I always assumed these followers were put together after the fact.
Thought about purchasing one for curiosity sake but never did. And the days of the voluminous parts bins at shows are long gone around here.
I remember at least one follower had a straight back slide as seen in the ebay offering and at least one had a 45 degree slide as shown by RCS.
These observations were years ago and the asking prices were nowhere near the amount the follower on ebay sold for.
Roger that. A couple years ago there were a couple of long nose slides mounted on -8 followers listed on gunbroker . The followers were a little long and did not fit correctly. They lasted a couple months at $135 or so. I should have purchased them based upon the price of early followers. The follower in the OP looks to have been together for a long time and the follower is an early unmarked type 4 with the coffin cut out.
still wondering where the straight back was used or just an unfinished part
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.
It was SOP to just toss obsolete parts during lower level rebuilds, one facility scrapped a couple of gas trap cylindersThese early slides could have resulted from that and been acquired and mounted on available late bodies by a surplus dealer.
Real men measure once and cut.
It was and still is. We had a local scrap dealer bid on the scrap from Camp Gagetown, called me at home one night to come identify some odds and ends. He took me into a sprung shelter and it was a tour like the last scene in "Raiders of the Lost Ark" where there were boxes stacked on each other. He had parts from all out weapons and broken bayonets and such. I expect all the gas trap parts taken off during rebuilds went this way, except then they probably went right to the dump not through a system of channels. I think we're lucky any survived through some foresight of others.
Regards, Jim