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GBEAR1
07-26-2015, 11:09
I have an original Remington 1903 made in late 41. All original and correct parts. No rebuild and very little wear. A Beautiful rifle. For some reason it has a biscuit cut on the upper hand guard even though there is no sign of any damage to it. It is the only flaw on the rifle. Is this commonly seen on the ANZAC guns? Could it be a precaution to possible damage? I see biscuit cutts on many British Enfields but never on 03s. I was thinking of replacing the hand guard but havent found one with the exact same length of sight groove. Or should I just leave it alone? Thanks in advance.

bruce
07-26-2015, 11:26
All original Remington 1903 w/ a biscuit cut? Leave it alone. Reason for the biscuit cut is anyone's guess. But, leave it alone. There are not many such rifles left... that have not been mixmastered by rebuilding. JMHO. Sincerely. bruce.

Rick the Librarian
07-26-2015, 11:55
I've seen quite a few repairs on British M1903s - my theory is they didn't have access to a lot of spare parts.

What's the first few digits of your rifle?

GBEAR1
07-26-2015, 12:02
ser #3,006,xxx

Rick the Librarian
07-26-2015, 12:34
Oh, an EARLY one, sounds nice!

Here's a picture of a British repaired "biscuit" handguard on a Remington M1903 I used to own:

31746

Rock
08-02-2015, 09:38
For some reason it has a biscuit cut on the upper hand guard even though there is no sign of any damage to it.

I've seen buscuit cuts on many SMLE handguards with no apparent damage. I have also wondered if this was done for strengthening or to limit cracks.

Roadkingtrax
08-02-2015, 12:42
Looks like we know where the Greek armorers got their training. If this is a common British repair...

dave
08-02-2015, 02:56
I've seen quite a few repairs on British M1903s - my theory is they didn't have access to a lot of spare parts.

What's the first few digits of your rifle?

Europeans are very frugal unlike the US Gov.