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Last edited by Joe W; 10-18-2012 at 08:36 PM.
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The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to Joe W For This Useful Post:
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10-18-2012 08:34 PM
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Looks like a nice rifle with a nice story to go with it. Awhile a go I made my first of two trips to Anniston and one of the rifles I purchased looked identical to yours. Light CMP
wood and that black finish though your wood has the grain going with the stock as mine was more tiger striped. The other thing that made it special like yours was it was the first time they had Winchesters for sale or something like that. I now have 3 Winchesters.
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Joe, Back in 1999, my friend bought an estate gun collection once owned by a Doctor who has died. There was one Type 1 NM M1
rifle in this group, s/n 6094444 with a SA 8-56 bbl, the sling was still in the shipping box with paper work. The Doctor just kept it in his rifle rack, never even shoot it. Robert
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Originally Posted by
RCS
Joe, Back in 1999, my friend bought an estate gun collection once owned by a Doctor who has died. There was one Type 1 NM
M1
rifle in this group, s/n 6094444 with a SA 8-56 bbl, the sling was still in the shipping box with paper work. The Doctor just kept it in his rifle rack, never even shoot it. Robert
Robert, I had made the trip to Anniston because I had thought my mail order would be to late to make the cut. As it turned out, I did make the cut and received a 2nd via mail order. That rifle was 6094414, only 30 numbers from the NM you mentioned. The rifle I got was not a NM, or if it was, it no longer is, as CMP
had rebarreled it with a new 1 of 55 SA standard barrel. Joe
---------- Post added at 09:53 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:44 PM ----------
Since my original post I have finished the stock with four coats of tung oil. Also I have found out that a number of these 6.0 rifles just released by CMP were not Greek returns. Some were Club rifles returned to CMP in the 1990s. This could be why this rifle had never went through a rebuild. Issued to a Club as a Type 1 and remained that way until returned, Just a guess.
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Thank You to Joe W For This Useful Post:
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Joe, Nice to get two 6 million SA rifles (also nice to find a H&R 6 million too). My friends 6 million is in FLA, the side of his barrel is marked as follows: T SA F6535448 6 56
A227B P M DOD stamp abd NM star between the gas cylinder rings
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Originally Posted by
RCS
Joe, Nice to get two 6 million SA rifles (also nice to find a H&R 6 million too). My friends 6 million is in FLA, the side of his barrel is marked as follows: T SA F6535448 6 56
A227B P M DOD stamp abd NM star between the gas cylinder rings
The barrel on my 6.087 is a 4 of 56 with a heat lot of A226B. Doubt I will every own, or much less see, a 6.0 H&R. Tony Giacobbe posted that in 1975, when he got his first M1
rifle, it was a HRA M1 D, serial number 6034402. In 1989 he sent it to Scott Duff, who at that time had never seen one.
Not sure of the real reason for allocating these 400 serial numbers. In a 2001 article by Scott Duff, he states that on Aug. 6, 1956, H&R had received an additional contract through the Boston Ordnance District, for 400 rifles. The assigned serial range was from 6034330 through 6034729. Scott further stated " it is believed this was a "clean up" order to allow H&R to use up receivers and other components.". Tony Giacobbe stated that "SA allocated HRA 400 serial numbers in the 6 million range to make up for receivers they made wrong and were destroyed."
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Contributing Member
Hra
When IHC negociated off their contract, they found themselves short of receivers to deliver the agreed number of rifles, and they couldn't make any more. Both SA and HRA supplied them to IHC, plus HRA had an overrun that Ord was thrilled to get to make up for any IHC shortfall. I have documents on it someplace.
Real men measure once and cut.
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