The first one I did, I went off the very minimal instructions given in the mdshooters forum...basically just said contact around the tang, the recoil lug+flat, and muzzle bed and nowhere else. It got frustrating, and I learned much by careful experience (I've never made a mistake wink wink). Digging around I found details in Campbell's book, and later Howe's "The Modern Gunsmith", which is in the public domain and a full text pdf is available here in this forum in the Knowledge Library.
very common in the boyds stocks I've seen. haven't seen this in a minelli.
all of mine have been loose in the magazine, but enough wood to make tight in the 3 areas that matter.
This is my big beef with them. They use a spray-tan stain to cover the fact that they are made out of soft sapwood walnut, or have seriously ugly grain, or both. They are very fat on the outside, and have to be slimmed to get the lower band on right, which means the whole thing gets sanded.
I'm currently in the middle of stocking 4 1903's. One was an a3 sporter already drilled and tapped for the old style redfield base. It got a minelli stock and is almost done (I have a thread on it). Another is an old sporter that had an original A4 receiver. It's getting a NOS USGI scant (I have a thread on it too). Paid big money at Northridge, first one they sent me was a factory second with very ugly milling errors (like band spring groove cut past the shoulder where the band sits). The sent me another no charge, just came in today and looks good. Came in it's original box. Was going to post pics shortly
The other two rifles are a 1903a3 that was in a shrunken unmarked straight stock, and a Remington M1903 that was in a warped CMP/boyds C-stock. These rifles are getting NOS USGI scants from Numrich. These were very cheap ($200), no handgaurds, but are original Keystone manufactured. They are tight everywhere...trigger gaurd, magazine. They were stained when they were made.
These USGI scant stocks were made as field replacements, and I like to think that using them puts the rifle back in line to what authentic "service history" would have looked like. While they are still available, I would recommend these over the Minelli's as replacements. The outsides need minimal work, just a light sand or scuff to clean them up before raw linseed oil.
I have never fitted a Garandstock before. I only have CMP service and field grades. The original stocked ones have been great and tight, and so have the ones that came in new wood.
Congrats. We never really leave. The more I've tried to move on (left in 2003 after surviving a very long MEU cruise that started in Kosovo and ended in Iraq), the more I realize my service defines me more than anything else.Information
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