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New to me M1
To all,
I have recently acquired a National Postal Meter M1
carbine with a CAI import mark. It is a mixmaster of Winchester, Inland Underwood and NPM parts as far as I can tell. It looks like the wood has been chewed by a beaver. The receiver and everything else looks pretty good, except the slide. There is a lot of lateral and vertical play in the slide/receiver interface. Not so much that the slide comes clear of the receiver, but enough that putting a magazine in too hard or bumping the slide inadvertently will cause the slide to come out of lock back. There is wear down to bare metal at the rear travel of the slide on the top of the bottom receiver rail.
I expect this is one of the CAI Israeli Korean imports, but there are no special markings to indicate that. My concerns are would a replacement slide maybe address the sloppiness of the slide receiver fit. Also, if I got the gun re-parkerized would that help the fit? The gun functions fine and the accuracy is above my expectations.
Also, would like to replace the old wood. I have checked around and for what I want this for (a shooter), I think a hardwood stock would suffice, but I am open to opinions.
My dad carried one of these for two years working as a prison guard in Japan
in the early 50's, so that is also what I am trying to emulate, a rebuilt weapon of that era. I'll try to include some pictures later.
Thanks,
JD
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01-09-2012 09:12 PM
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First off JD let me welcome you to the site.
You could fix none, some or all of the sloppiness depending on how the receiver looks. Most of the time it is the slide. if the guide slot in the receiver looks good then replacing the slide with a good one will likely fix it. Let us know how it goes and BTW, if there are no pictures, it never happened
So, post some of your new war baby so we can have a look at her.
Bill Hollinger
"We're surrounded, that simplifies our problem!"
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Legacy Member
You might want to buy a copy of "US M1
Carbines, Wartime Production" by Craig Riesch. There are drawings of all versions of the parts. There is a later version of the operating slide stop (Type III) may hold the slide better, but the slide lock is never positive; this is not considered a problem, as locking the slide back was never considered important by the US military.
Based on the variable quality of CAI milsurps, plus the fact that Korean Army armorers sometimes made repairs we would consider unsafe (e.g., welding a broken bolt lug), you may want to pay a gunsmith to check it out. I'd look for a "service trained armorer". Parkerizing is strictly cosmetic, it won't tighten up your gun.
Most USGI stocks were walnut, some replacements were birch (both are hardwoods). Birch doesn't have the nice grain of walnut & doesn't take stain well, but it is stronger than walnut. Decent USGI stocks are getting hard to find out there, but there is nothing wrong with a commercial stock if made to milspec.
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JD welcome to thr forum.
I would try a differant slide to see if it fits better than the one you have.
CAI recently imported carbines from Isreal and SOG was/is selling them. I got one, it was the dirtiest gun I had ever received. It took 2 days to detail it but when done I was very happy.
Does your stock have any very small circled numerals stamps? The Isreali's also liked to stamp the serial # on the left side of the stock near the slingwell. Does the receiver have any other than G.I. stamps or small electro pencil marks?
I have an extra NPM stock, I also have some very good M2 stocks . If you're interested PM me and I can e-mail some pics.
Like Bill said post some pics when you can.....Frank
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I just got an IBM Carbine that was imported by CAI. I'll have to vouch for what Frank said about them being dirty. They must have had a rule that said to oil all parts heavily everyday!
I'm beginning my second day of the detail cleaning and have never seen as much "crud" inside of a gun before. There's a tab on the slide near the back that runs in the receiver rail. From top to bottom, this tab is supposed to measure around .240 in. on a good one. If it's worn a lot, that might be your problem. I had one that was worn down to .226 in. and it disengaged pretty easily. Other places to look for wear are on the receiver groove itself and on the grooves on the sides of the barrel, including the lugs on the slide that run in them. The day I bought my IBM, they had an Inland with a better looking stock, but it had a nasty looking dark ring inside the barrel about an inch or so back from the muzzle. My IBM has a nice NPM trigger housing. Does your NPM happen to have an IBM? Welcome to the Forum! - Bob
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To me, it looks like about half the carbines I've owned. Until you wring it out you won't know how it works and how accurate it is. The sight can be drifted carefully over and the wood refinished. the over all finish can be redone and the slid's mostly normal. The mag thing is too for what I've found.
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My range time
I have had this out a couple of times and for the most part it shoots about 3" at 50 yards. But that is based on my 55 yr old eyes and cheap(er) ammo. It shoots better with the RNSP hunting ammo; however, this shoots to the left of where regular RNFMJ hits. So far, I have had only one FTF with a reload that showed a very light primer stike. Otherwise, 200 rounds without any issues.
Looked around fro a replacement slide and they are running $90 to $135 depending on brand and vendor. I was hoping for a NPM, but since I want a shooter more than a correct collector's piece. I saw some at Riverbank, but have read mixed reviews on them. Others have replacement slides listed, but no mfg. info. Looking for any thoughts.
Thanks,
JD
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STAY AWAY FROM RIVERBANK........ ALL REPRO/JUNK.......... 
List your needs here on the WANT TO BUY adds. You can list as buy/trade.
Best bet, deal with members/collectors.
Slides- Along with wear on the rear tab, look at wear on the 2 inner pads above the rear shelf, at the rear wall of the slide well. They can get pretty rounded off, causing side to side play. While checking, Is your Slide Spring in good shape?
Charlie-painter777
Last edited by painter777; 01-10-2012 at 11:02 PM.
Reason: add info
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Thank You to painter777 For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
JD, saw this over on the CMP
carbine forum. He's a reputable seller.
NPM carbine parts - CMP Forums
Regards.....Frank
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