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Legacy Member
Beech Aussie Handguards
I have a buttstock and carry handle and pistol grip which appear to be beechwood and allegedly came from an Australian L1A1. Having MAJOR difficulties find handguards that are clearly beech. Did the aussies use beech for their handguards?
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09-24-2015 05:24 PM
# ADS
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Thank You to mrclark303 For This Useful Post:
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Advisory Panel
FN C1s and A1s used walnut for stocking.
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Thank You to browningautorifle For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
So long story short, the guy who sold this lot to me as Aussie was telling porky pies! Oh well, I ive and learn. What I need now then is a beech set of British handguards (these had the elongated oval slots right?).
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Contributing Member
First things first, you need to verify what wood work you have, take a look under the wrist on the butt, there should hopefully be some markings, what do you see ? If its SLAZ or MA its Lithgow and you need to go down the Coachwood route.
Assuming its British, and I might be wrong here, but I think the beech was used for replacement parts, or perhaps the last few rifles off the line, so about 1964 on I would guess..
You are looking for the two slot triangular forend, if the markings are still visible, it will be B (BSA), D (Enfield) or F (Fazakerley) marked, followed by a two digit year suffix.
If its Fazakerley though, it will be walnut, as they stopped parts production in 1960
Assuming you can find a pair in good order (not that easy to find now), carefully check for cracks between the slots or radiating from the screw hole.
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Thank You to mrclark303 For This Useful Post:
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On the other hand............... Walk into any Armourers shop in the real world, away from the concourse comp crowd and guess what'd happen? BSA, Faz, Enfield, P-H, SLAZ, LB, they're made to be interchangeable so you'd get the next matching set on the shelf. If they fit and match the remainder, out they go.
Just my jaundiced but realistic and pragmatic look at life as it was.
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Contributing Member
Point taken, (you know what us collectors are like!) unfortunately, they are hard to find these days Peter, in any condition, its only the more robust laminates that seem to have survived in good order and in any number.
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Legacy Member
Yep that be true. Of cours ethere is Peter with his view of "getting functioning guns back into the hands of Soldiers so they work and can kill the enemy". It's almost like the army doesn't care if the handguard sets aren't highly polished book matched birds eye maple with buttstock and grip from the same branch of the same tree with matching grain like WE all know if how they are suppose to look .LOL
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Contributing Member
Inch pattern anoraks! .... Yep, that would be me!
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What's more, if there were dues-out, we'd put the cracked handguard to one side and patch it. Couldn't even start to guess how many splits around the screw cup or captive nut I've put a cross section patch in. And rear enders where the retaining ring has chomped a chunk of wood out. Or splits along the rear end of the gas cylinder.........
The good thing was that so far as I recall, no one brought a rifle back and said that he wasn't happy with BSA or F handguards on his Lithgow or it wasn't serviceable or my Armouring skills weren't quite up to scratch. It might have happened but I don't remember it........
RSM Lee was quite impressed with the 12 sets of L1A1 rifle bayonet grips I made for the quarter guard. I wonder of he'd notice mismatched wood?
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Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post: