View Full Version : Questions on a carbine acquisition
Trapdoors are new to me and I have never owned one until the other day when I purchased a 1884 carbine for $130 and it's missing the band and buttplate.
What are the correct replacements for these ?
You need the barrel band with large "U" and butt plate with door. Does your carbine have a hole in the butt stock? It should. Post pictures for a more accurate answer. $130 is very good price basically free for what you got if it is a real carbine and not cut down.
Dick Hosmer
06-25-2014, 08:59
Yes, if real, that's ten cents on the dollar! Even if it isn't, it will be cheap fun.
Initially it appears to be the real deal.
I'm more familiar with the Krag and the cut down ones and the Bannerman guns, so a cut one is quite evident to me.
What carbine specific marks am I looking for ?
Somebody screwed up in a big way at the local Cabelas when it was priced.
I don't know jack about digital cameras and such so no pic will be forthcoming but, yes, there is the hole in the butt, about 80% finish, tight action and bright bore.
I'm away from home at the moment, but will inspect it more thoroughly tomorrow when I return.
Sometimes even a blind dog gets a bone.
good deal for you, when you get home check to see if there are numbers where the butt plate would be, From my experience, and not much I might add there is always numbers in the wood where butt plate is. what these numbers indicate I do not know and im curious myself what they indicate. Maybe dick can help with that part. I heard he knows a little about this stuff and may have a few rifle and carbines himself,
1884 breech block & SN puts it made in 82 with a star. What is the meaning of the star ?
Dick Hosmer
06-27-2014, 11:52
It denotes a second-class arm, to be issued to the militia, or held in reserve. Appropriation for manufacture was paid out of a separate account, and the arms were not counted as new production, in the annual running totals. A block of about 20,000 numbers was allocated to this usage, and no duplicate numbers (star/no star) have ever surfaced. The arms used a lot of non-critical parts from the recall of 1879. Many star carbines will have early dated lockplates and coarse checkered "criss-cross" hammers, etc. They are "interesting", but not rare. An 1884 block would not be original to the gun. Sorry - cannot help on the "numbers by butt-plate" issue, other than to guess that they would be some sort of manufacturing code, possibly having to do with piece-work count for payment?
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