May be of interest to some of you here,
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May be of interest to some of you here,
Information
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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.
Really interesting... some remnants of these experiments turned up at the Stratford, CT show in the early 1980s, including two receivers without logo, just a large X scratched in the heel. Asking price was $10K. I passed because there was almost no chance of ever completing them into a rifle.
Real men measure once and cut.
I once had a Garand that had been built into a "sorta" BM59 clone. I can't remember who made the receiver, but it had a .308 18 inch "Tanker Garand" barrel and furniture (with a screw on brake) and took M14magazines. The stock was essentially a modified M1 stock with a relief cut (as the M14) to "rock" the magazine in. I have no idea why I sold it, but I wish I hadn't.
"You are what you do when it counts."
Gained some firsthand insight into the rate of fire of a Garandwith the disconnector inop. A pal picked one up with what turned out to be a loose trigger group (stock had been over sanded). First pull of the trigger produced a mag dump with ping most rapido-speedo. Luckily, he managed to maintain control of the rifle. Impressive, it was.
There was a gas trap M1rifle serial number 7114 that was secretly sent to England
in May 1939 for examination and
conversion to a full auto machine rifle. British code name was Y.S.L. (Yankee Self loader). Billy Pyle's book "The Gas
Trap Garand" shows all the photos plus the British drawings of the full auto parts used for the conversion to full auto.
This rifle is in the MoD Pattern Room collection
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.