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Help with 1903a3 purchase
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08-23-2016 08:34 PM
# ADS
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I'm not a pro so I'll just say NICE looking stock, anyway! The rest is very presentable too, but I'm learning about the bolts and such. Does it have any marks on the bolt handle flat, above or below? A picture of that area, from the top, seems to help.
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Welcome to the forum, the whole rifle looks nice. We don't see those around here at all...
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rifle is a parts gun, stamps are fake as you can get, someone has sanded the relief cut for the cuttoff badly..unless its real cheap, id find another example
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That would be perfect for me then...a shooter.
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Contributing Member

Originally Posted by
chuckindenver
rifle is a parts gun, stamps are fake as you can get, someone has sanded the relief cut for the cuttoff badly..unless its real cheap, id find another example
Not arguing with you, just want to learn. Why are the stamps fake? How can you tell?
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For the benefit of everyone on here and to promote learning the barrel is dated 7-44, which should be considered a replacement as Remington barrel dates of original 1903A3 rifles stopped at 3-44.This rifle is a good example of what can happen if a buyer doesn't do his or her research before forking over their money. Good on Kdog for posting and learning before buying.
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Thank You to One Holer For This Useful Post:
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Is the stock earlier than the rest of the gun and someone has modified the woodwork to get it to fit together with the metalwork?
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Actually, the last "production" Remington M1903A3 barrels (fitted on finished production rifles) was 12-43 and maybe 1-44 - anything after is a replacement. I'd definitely be suspicious, at least of the RA - the "R" is a LOT "deeper" than the A.
People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.
--George Orwell
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The story i got from the dealer is that he bought a handful of military surplus rifles from a family that the father had passed away and he had these rifles for a long time,,,,like they always remembered he had these military rifles.The dealer thinks the guy got them back in the 60-70s before the CMP
was the CMP.Thats the story i got anyway,,,,,just thought id see if this was a good deal or not before i spent the money.....i certainly wouldn't want to buy a rifle with fake cartouches.