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M1 Carbine Stock- Longitudinal Lamination??
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12-24-2015 07:56 PM
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It's not a lamination, like plywood. If it exists, it's where two pieces of wood were glued together to make a stock blank. I can imagine this was allowed when walnut got scarce and this procedure made use of what would previously have been scrap.
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Yes, I meant a 2 piece lamination- not like a late war German
k98 . The line is easy to see also on the BOTTOM of the pistol grip (not the front where hands have "polished" it away) & can also be seen part of the way up the bottom of the butt.
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I'm pretty sure it's a birch stock. Birch does not stain well and does not absorb oil well too. Oil causes the long dark streaks in the Birch which makes it look like a laminate. Birch is a funny wood as to what it will take into the grain and where it absorbs stain or oil. As far as I can tell the only ones making laminate stocks for testing with rifle grenades was Springfield Armory.
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I have numerous birch & walnut carbine stocks plus one South Korean soft wood stock. Also have a Finn M39 tiger stripe Birch ! I'm sure this one is walnut. I read that the few carbine stocks that were laminated for grenades, etc were NOT done longitudinally.
Last edited by Aunt Bee; 12-25-2015 at 11:49 PM.
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At one point during the war, there was a shortage of walnut so blanks were put together from larger pieces. Many pieces of stock material that had flaws like large knots were also used after the bad area was milled out and a new piece of wood was glued in. The shortage never got bad, but for a short while some carbine stocks were "pieced together". They are actually fairly scarce.
When they tell you to behave, they always forget to specify whether to behave well or badly!

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Ever notice that every Arisaka stock has one of these?
About 2/3 down on the buttstock there is a glued joint. All the Japanese
stocks had it.
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I am familiar with the Arisaka
and a lot of the Finnish
M 39's had the buttstock repair--This is nothing like that type of repair but thank you for the come back !!