I have only one M1917, an Eddystone.
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I have only one M1917, an Eddystone.
Information
![]()
Warning: This is a relatively older thread
This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current.
Nice looking rifle. How does it shoot?
Nice, original bluing. Whats the full details on markings etc
I just got one, its disassembled on my bench, heavy gunk. Do you use grease or regular gun oil?
Nice looking rifle.
Awesome!! Thank you!
The advice I have read, which seems to make mechanical sense, is "if it slides, grease it, if it rotates, oil it!
To which I would add - whatever lubricant, just use the minimum necessary for correct functioning. Any excess ends up where you don't want it and acts as a dirt trap.
---------- Post added at 01:09 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:01 PM ----------
That's quite enough to see off the competition. Eddystone was a one-product factory that was tuned to perfection for producing M1917s. Better value for money than Remington (same product, more expensive name) or Winchester (seriously overpriced by collectors because of the name). For accuracy, the M1917 beats any other rifle of the WWI generation. And most '03-A3s, but don't tell the Springfield fans that they have spent most of their money on a name!
Nothing wrong with that!
I have 4 incomplete ones to make into one!
Last edited by jonh172; 12-17-2018 at 12:42 PM.
If you are not in a very humid area, then oil is fine.
I store mine in a cooler area of the shop that is quasi hidden (my gun safe is full of the value far more desired guns for bad people)
I doubt anyone is going to carry off a 1917 and if they do it sticks out like a sore thumb!
No issues with rust, they just get oil in the barrel.