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General Tire & Rubber fiberglass M14 stocks
When the M14 rifle became available in large numbers in the early 1960's, there also appeared a fiberglass stock also with the hinged butt plate (early examples of the fiberglass stock used the M1 rifle butt plate). From the examples that I have found, there are two variations.
The first variation is without the checkering pattern on the pistol grip and fore-end while the second variation has the checkering patterns.
It is not common to find the early variation of the fiberglass stock and would assume that it did not last too long in service. I have seen the early fiberglass stocks on new issue M14 rifles and often wondered if they were testing the stocks. Also could some of these fiberglass stocks be used on new production M14 rifles ?Attachment 95526Attachment 95527Attachment 95528Attachment 95529Attachment 95530
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The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to RCS For This Useful Post:
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08-30-2018 10:24 AM
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They used to turn up at gun shows every so often. Wasn't there a green one too?
Real men measure once and cut.
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I have not seen any of the "smooth" ones. They will "work" on modern receivers, but they definitely need some reworking to get band tension and aligned with the Ferrell.
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Legacy Member
I know two friends that were both together in the same US Army basic training company at Fort Leonard Wood, MO in Feb 1964. They were the second basic training
group to receive the new M14 rifles, which were all TRW manufacture. They had about a dozen of these M14 rifles with the smooth General Tire & Rubber fiberglass
stocks. I would doubt they broke that many stocks in the first group to cycle through basic training and think the fiberglass stocks were just being tested (it was winter)
I would the General Tire & Rubber stocks would be considered collectors items now
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Fiberglass
They experimented with fiberglass stocks for the M1, too. This one is by Lunn Laminates on Long Island (NY). I seem to recall that it was done around 1955 and was not good in cold weather. There were other types around, similar to the ones Robert cites for the M14.Attachment 95599 IIRC I paid $80 for it in the 1970s.
Real men measure once and cut.
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Thank You to Bob Seijas For This Useful Post:
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Bob, you are about right on the timing I believe of the m1 stock. Before I retired from Carlisle I met a guy at a Maryland arms collectors assn meeting and he said he would bring some documents to the Baltimore show that year regarding the Garand. His father had apparently worked at Aberdeen and had found these documents in the garbage or were being tossed during renovation etc. They were the accuracy test documents for the m5 and m5a1bayonets as well as the plastic or fiberglass stock. I believe there were a couple other folders too but I don’t recall what they were. I offered to buy them but he wanted to show them to Scott Duff first. I never followed up so I assume Scott ended up with them. All were in the 53-56 time frame I believe.
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Thank You to cpc For This Useful Post:
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More Fiberglass
There was also a fiberglass handguard assembly that incorporated both front and rear guards in one piece. It required a special lower band.
Attachment 95654
Real men measure once and cut.
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Those glass M14 stocks fit just fine on the new Bula M14's. I put one on mine.
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TankerDon, trying to catch your brass?
“There are three kinds of men. The ones that learn by readin’. The few who learn by observation.
The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence for themselves.” - Will Rogers
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Contributing Member
They fit well on a '86 SA M1A also.
Attachment 95696
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