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Fake Garand Cartouche?
Greetings and Happy New Year!
I was at a gun show recently and came across a Garand with the cartouche below. I'm a long way from knowing anything about anything and I wanted to get the opinion of some forum members as to whether this cartouche is legit or not. I will save my opinion so as not to throw any possible bias into the responses. Unfortunately, I didn't write down any information on the weapon this was on.
Attachment 48636
I also have the same question regarding an M1
Carbine that I will post in that forum.
Link: Fake Cartouche?
Thanks!
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01-06-2014 07:06 PM
# ADS
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The NFR is a good one but the Carbine is funny and fake. I try to stay away from Carbine verification's because they are so tainted with forgeries that many believe the fakes are real now. Rick B
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Advisory Panel
they are so tainted with forgeries that many believe the fakes are real now. Rick B
And there in lies our problem for the future...
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Thank You to Badger For This Useful Post:
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Originally Posted by
Badger
Jim, thanks for you ongoing support
My pleasure Boss... The reason I see this thing as a problem personally is I currently only have one collectable M1
and it's the 3XX XXX SA GHS LL...when I try to sell it in the far(I hope) future, no one will believe it's original...I fear. Even now some scoff...if I didn't know the history myself, I'd probably be the same...
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Thanks Rick. I've read some of your previous posts and I'm trying to see if I'm 'getting it'. I originally thought the the curve of the 'S' looked good and the crossbar of the 'A' did as well. What made me suspicious and take the pic was the extra gap between the 'N' and the 'R', as well as the crossbars on the 'F' being out of parallel. After looking at a couple of reference books when I got home I saw that both were supposed to be that way.
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Fake
Rick is rightly concerned about telling why he says it's fake, that just give the fakers better info for their next generation. Each time he exposes a fake it makes that whole generation of fakes and their stamp obsolete. Nobody even tries to sell a "snoopy" anymore, all those stocks are firewood thanks to GCA
Journal exposure. But some day somebody will make a perfect one.
Real men measure once and cut.
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Bob, the other issues is sometimes real ones hit the market and luckily I bought it before one of the forgers could get it. This came from an Armors family and was up on Ebay with a Make an offer tag on it. I was shaking and super nervous that someone else would get it while I was waiting for an answer. They accepted my offer of $150.00 while they had a buy it now for $250.00 It is off the streets and is 100% legit. Rick B
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Real
Yes, Rick, real ones do pop up once in a while, but I have never seen WWII. I believe the WARDOR stamps were real, and I bought a complete set of DAS at OGCA around 1980. Five square sizes, five round sizes, five rubber stamps of each type. Price was $125 and he had 2 1/2 sets. IIRC he said they came out of Rock Island.
Real men measure once and cut.
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Say for instance your restoring a stock. One of the cartouches is gone but you have the real deal, correct stamp and restamp it. Is this faking it or restoring it in the eyes of collectors? I have my opinion but wonder what you serious collectors think.
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