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1918 M1903 Found and Pictures
Here is the latest M1903 I have found.
The SA 1903A1 also has the correct barrel for the receiver SA 94X,XXX. SA 6-18 MW=0. Perfect bore. It also has the original cleaning kit in the buttstock. The c-stock is a NM pre-WWII c-stock. It has an F and S in the cutoff recess. This proves it's NM origins. This rifle is easily worth $1800.
Has CMP papers . The NM SA 1903A1 has an SA 6-18 barrel with a MW=0.0. She is stellar.
Those are the details I have of the rifle that the seller sent me. Heres some pictures. If everything works out I should have it tomorrow. , Jay
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04-19-2011 01:43 PM
# ADS
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Nice looking rifle, should make a good shooter!
I'd be interested to know if there really is a way to determine if the stock was once on a NM rifle. Looks like someone got ahold of it with some sandpaper and removed some stamps.
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How do you know a rifle is a NM rifle to begin with ? Im guessing the NM rifles never went to war .
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Interesting parts gun. There were no A1s made in 1918. It has a ww2 handguard. If it does not have a drawing number on the stock ahead of the rear swivel, it's not a NM stock. I can assure you that the handguard is not a NM. They too have to have the drawing number on them. I hope you didn't pay NM or completely authentic price for it.
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Is this rifle a A1? What year is the rifle, from what I looked up its a 1918 receaver. Whats the A below the 6-18 on the barrel stand for?
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Barrel and receiver match, 1918. I don't think A1's came out until the early to mid-30's.
J.B. has said after 1916, the meaning of the "A" on the barrel is unknown. Prior to that, it was deemed "acceptable", during inspection/overhaul.
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The stock is almost certainly a non-NM stock. Any sign of a serial number on the bottom side near the butt swivel? mAlthough hard to tell without some closer pictures, I'd say more like a $900-1000 rifle.
Springfield Armory produced thousands of non-NM Type C stocks. All had an "S" in the recess for the cutoff.
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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I will look it over when I get the rifle in and post up some pictures. I was told it has numbers on the stock I think. Would a 1918 SA stock be worth way more than a NM stock? I want to put the rifle back into its 1918 year.
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Not sure this is a NM stock. I know this is not an NM rifle. If I may ask, what did you pay for this rifle?
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Im glad its not a NM rifle, im looking for a USGI WW1 SA that could have gone to war. I may have 900 in it. But I dont have it yet. ,Jay