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Identification of Remington M1903 Stock
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07-14-2016 04:02 PM
# ADS
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Advisory Panel
more pictures of the stock and markings are needed to help
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No Problem
I will get some better pictures up as soon as i can. (although you won't see much , there aren't any well pronounced markings except for this one)
In the meantime , does anyone know what this little symbol is?
It is also worth having a look at this picture
You can see the faint outline of the "P" Proof mark much better here , along with said Hourglass
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1. Look on the upper part of the stock near where the receiver would fit - is there a "slot" on either side? This would be for a M1903A3 handguard ring. If so, the stock is a M1903A3.
2. The mark I see MAY be a sub-inspection stamp for an earlier Remington M1903.
People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.
--George Orwell
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1. Look on the upper part of the stock near where the receiver would fit - is there a "slot" on either side? This would be for a M1903A3 handguard ring. If so, the stock is a M1903A3.
2. The mark I see MAY be a sub-inspection stamp for an earlier Remington M1903.
Hi Rick thanks for the comment. Would you be able to show a picture of what you are referring to?
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Below is a comparative picture of a Remington M1903 (top) stock with a M1903A3 (note the "slots") stock (the stock is mounted on a earlier Remington 1903 rifle at bottom. The "slots" were for a M1903A3 handguard ring, which held the different 03A3 handguard in place.
[IMG]
[/IMG]
Below is a picture of an earlier Remington M1903 (3,051,000 range) with the subinspection marks I mentioned - there were numerous different marking "shapes":
Last edited by Rick the Librarian; 07-15-2016 at 10:27 AM.
People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf.
--George Orwell
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Thank You to Rick the Librarian For This Useful Post:
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Firebirdc9: I have the same little "hourglass" shaped stamp in two places on the stock in my current thread (WW2 rebuild?). One is in the same spot as yours but there is also one inside on the flat area behind the triggerguard screw hole that looks quite clearly to be a stylized "K". Could this indicate "Keystone" manufacture?
Ridolpho
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the marking you have in question is called a gallery marking, common on Remingtons, i also see a faint RLB, likely the original stock.
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Thanks for the input everyone.
Its looking like this stock may be the original (or at least an actual M1903 replacement stock) just a rather beaten up example.
Could you go into more detail on where you think you see the faint RLB? is it in the rectangle i mentioned? I can't see what you are referring to
Thanks