-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
-
01-20-2014 02:07 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Nice lookin rifle, I see its in a mk.1 stock as well.
-
-
I agree - nice example of a rebuilt M1903. I didn't notice the Mark I stock, but there it is. Does the handguard have a "D28179" stamp on the top?
People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.
--George Orwell
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Yes Rick, I guess the previous post was unnecessary
. And hand guard is #'d as such. How did you know? Have you been snooping around my house again? What does it signify? Thanks
Cheers
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
You have a beauty there! What year is the receiver?
If it shoots as well as it looks, you have it all.
Knowing these rifles, it will!
If not, I would trade with you!
Mine shoots, but doesn't look as nice.
On another track, the first picture, the chair the rifle
is on. Is there a button on the arm to adjust the back?
It looks like a chair that was made in Grand Rapids
many years ago. I had one like it, and it had a slide
out foot rest. I miss that chair, it was comfortable.
My dobie likes the love seat we have now, tho!
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed

Originally Posted by
Crashyoung
You have a beauty there! What year is the receiver?
If it shoots as well as it looks, you have it all.
Knowing these rifles, it will!
If not, I would trade with you!
Mine shoots, but doesn't look as nice.
On another track, the first picture, the chair the rifle
is on. Is there a button on the arm to adjust the back?
It looks like a chair that was made in Grand Rapids
many years ago. I had one like it, and it had a slide
out foot rest. I miss that chair, it was comfortable.
My dobie likes the love seat we have now, tho!
Thank you, receiver is somewhere in late 1918 range, and I've taken it out twice now and I am very pleased
As for the chair, I built it to Stickley specs and it has removable pegs on chair arms which can be moved back or forward to recline. No lazy boy foot pop out but I did make a matching ottoman that, if I'm lucky my dog will let me use.
Cheers
-
Just a hunch. The D28179 stamp was put on late 1930s handguards, a drawing number. Other parts made at the same time were marked with other drawing numbers. They were like "catalog" numbers, not serial numbers.
People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.
--George Orwell
-
-
Legacy Member
RIA rifle/Stickley Chair
Nice gun. Nicer chair. We have both in common. I spend the long winter days up here in the northern end of the Peoples Republic of New York fondling my .03s and building Stickley furniture out of cherry I've logged off my place over the years. I'd love to talk to you about staining and finishing white oak a la Gus - which is giving me problems you have obviously solved. If you get a chance, I'd appreciate getting in touch. Apologies for diverting from the thread. Dokcop@gmail.com
-
-
Legacy Member
doccop, look into spirit based stains. MUCH better results then oil based when used on hardwoods.
-
-
Legacy Member
1903/stickley
Thanks, Father. How do you handle the raised grain in white oak? Sanding/planing seems to excavate the softer wood on the white oak that grows around here and is hard to beat, regardless of sanding techniques and razor sharp planer blades. Fine on posts, etc., but a smoother finish would be nice on table tops….
Regards, Dokcop
-