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What is my 'white bag' carbine worth these days ?
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01-29-2017 10:31 AM
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White bag carbines can go for big money depending on condition and sometimes they sell for big money because someone just has to have one without condition mattering as much. Also, they seem to gravitate in the 1200 to 1800 range, but like with any carbine oddity sometimes they don't sell in record time due to the amount involved. Yours won't be helped by the replacement barrel so it will be a matter of finding the right buyer. It sounds like a neat carbine!
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I disagree about the barrel - its a rebuild so it could have any parts on it. The point is it is in pristine Armory condition, not that its in any way supposed to be a 'correct' as-manufactured carbine. Its value comes from being a 'white-bag', not how much of it is still original. You have to assume its a refinish and usually in a different stock too, but that all goes with the territory. But in order to get top dollar, it basically has to be unfired or at least fired very little since opening the bag.
'Really Senior Member'

Especially since I started on the original Culver forum. That had to be about 1998.
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Inland44 is wright about the Underwood barrel on an Inland carbine. The carbine is as the DOD wanted it to be. I think it is a shame so many carbines are shuffled like a deck of cards; then sold as correct. Sorry, but that's my 2 cents worth.
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Originally Posted by
Bob in Maine
Inland44 is wright about the Underwood barrel on an Inland carbine. The carbine is as the DOD wanted it to be. I think it is a shame so many carbines are shuffled like a deck of cards; then sold as correct. Sorry, but that's my 2 cents worth.
Another way to look at is that it's as DOD wanted at rebuild or rearsenal, with a replacement barrel. Again, it sounds like a neat M1
carbine, one that many collectors would like to have.
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Thank You to painter777 For This Useful Post:
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I would love to show pictures but can't get pictures to send from my 'junk' computer or old 'junk' cell phone. Soon I'm going to have to break down and get newer 'junk'. I will say the carbine was a good investment. The carbine came to me in 2003 from CMP
, and was routed through my club. A point to remember about the white bag is the serial number of the carbine is printed on the outside, along with other writings, and all bags were slit so the CMP could verify make and serial numbers. Just in case you run into one. Bob.
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Correction !
I was wrong in my last post. The 'white bag' does not have the serial number printed on it. Only printed is that there is a carbine, mag., oiler, and sling inside. CMP
removed the oiler, sling, and mag, then sold them at a latter date. So only the carbine was in my bag.
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Just my opinion but not all white bags have the same value. There were a few different versions of the white bag release by CMP
in 2003 (see CCNL316). I think the most collectable version was stamped "OSD NORVA" with dates between 1953 and 1954. These were probably off Navy ships that were being mothballed. Many have the type 1 or type 2 barrel bands and show very little use.
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Agree Chris.
There are different white sacks. I received a silver sack DCM Garand
in 83. The gun came out of Rock Island and the word was that these were a group of M1s put together for foreign sale. Inside was essentially a brand new Garand. Every part except the receiver (SA 3.3) was new. New, very heavy walnut, glass bedded at the bottom as done by SA n the 60s. Came with combo tool new sling and delron white guards on the muzzle and op-rod. Dessicant tube inside the barrel. Proof fired with a brand new 11/65 SA barrel.
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