-
Legacy Member
not BLO
, RLO please.
-
-
12-03-2013 08:31 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Legacy Member
Sounds like you have a warped hand guard. The original hand guard had a larger radius relief in the center so you could see the whole front sight. Unfortunately these tended to crack down the center because the wood was rather thin there. So, they revised the relief to be more shallow and narrow. So you have two problems; a warped hand guard and a high center cut. You can wrap sandpaper around a wood dowel of a certain diameter and expand the center relief. You'll have to stain and oil it after that.
-
The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to INLAND44 For This Useful Post:
-
-
Legacy Member
You are correct
It is much thicker in the middle than my Winchester. I can't see a warp, but it looks like the flat area of the right edge was surfaced at an angle tilting toward the right. That edge hits first and this makes the right side sit higher. Since it is the match HI apparently original to the carbine, I going to just stop where I am with only about 1/2 of the front sight hidden. It also loosened up the guard which is good. When I look down the Winchester, the whole front sight is visible and you can see that it is much thinner in the center U cut. One thing is obvious on all of my carbines and that is not much lines up. The wood is tilted on all of them, but they all shoot dead on POA at 100 yds.
Thanks for your thoughts.
-
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
DaveHH
but they all shoot dead on
That's because the wood has nothing to do with the sights...if mine were that far out, I'd re-profile it. If you do it right, no-one will be able to tell. In 20 years no one will care I think.
-
-
Legacy Member
Its typical of the later carbines to see only the top half of the sight blade. If you think about it, that's really all you need to see, which is why they modified the hand guard. My 1944 Inland is that way, and it has the 2-rivet hand guard. It still irritates me when I shoot it, which these days is not even yearly. I bought it back in '91 when I was just getting started in guns, and at that time I had plans for it as my PDW long-gun. I had a case of hollow-point ammo made which I still have except a few I shot for function/accuracy. These days, with value increased dramatically, I'm in conservation mode with it. Sometimes I wish I had an old 'Enforcer' pistol because the .30 Carbine round is really ideal for 'yard work'.
-
-
Advisory Panel
I had an enforcer...you missed out Inland, it was a hoot. I just wish it had been in FA...
-
-
I have shot a lot with an M2, it is a pretty interesting. But the shell cases really come flying out. Better start out with a large supply.
-
-
Legacy Member
True you only need the top 1/2
I feel a lot more dangerous when I look through the rear peep and see everything. Leaves no room for doubt. I used an M14
in the war and it had M1 sights. This carbine is a very low mile original and I just don't feel right tearing into matching HI 69 year old wood. I used some naval jelly to get bad rust off the buttplate and felt bad about that. This thing sat in a closet somewhere with just the buttplate getting wet. I've been shooting it just to see how well it does compared to the Winchester and NPM. While the wood isn't as gamechanging on the carbine as it is on a Garand, the same factors appear with the handguard. If it is too tight it may cause stringing as the barrel heats.
-
-
-
-
Legacy Member
Jeez; that hand guard is a monster! Kill it before it multiplies!
Charlie, there are fixes for all those problems you mentioned. It's okay to have a very slight fore and aft movement of the HG, 1/32" or less. There's a lot of fitting on the front end of a carbine. The band should be vertical when tight and snug against the shoulder of the stock, at the same time the head of the band spring is tight against the back of the notch in the band. At this point the hand guard should be held fairly tight. Also, the recoil plate and receiver tang should be adjusted so that when the action is bumped into place after hanging it on the recoil plate, the barrel should settle and stop slightly above the stock barrel channel so the barrel band will slide onto the nose of the stock without raising or lowering the barrel. When you have this set-up, you have a well-fitted carbine.
-