4th block M-1899 carbine.

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • 5MadFarmers
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2009
    • 2815

    #1

    4th block M-1899 carbine.

    Page 256 in the good book. FY02-03. 1 M-1899 carbine.

    420813.jpg

    Not an over-stamp. Appears to be it's the only 4th block M-1899 carbine.
  • Kragrifle
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2010
    • 1161

    #2
    Current auction?

    Comment

    • 5MadFarmers
      Senior Member
      • Nov 2009
      • 2815

      #3
      Originally posted by Kragrifle
      Current auction?
      Goodness no; it's on my dining room table.

      Comment

      • jon_norstog
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2009
        • 3896

        #4
        The armory only made one of them?

        jn

        Comment

        • Kragrifle
          Senior Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 1161

          #5
          Not many

          Comment

          • 5MadFarmers
            Senior Member
            • Nov 2009
            • 2815

            #6
            Originally posted by jon_norstog
            The armory only made one of them?

            jn
            Exactly one.
            First block was 1899.
            Second block was 1900.
            Third block was 1901.
            Fourth block is 1902. Just the one.

            They took M-1898 receiver and "overstruck" them to 1899. Those I've seen. Obviously overstruck.

            8 and 9. Notice 8 has two circles inside? 9 has one. Their "font" has a smaller circle on top in the 8. A 99 and a 98 can be detected as the metal left in that small upper circle is smaller on the 8 and isn't "expanded" on the overstrike. The circles on the 99s are different when overstruck as the second 9 has the smaller metal bit from the 8. Did that make sense?

            1 complete carbine. Didn't check for spare parts receivers. That's possible. Given the overstrikes though I'd say it's unlikely.
            Last edited by 5MadFarmers; 06-23-2017, 11:13.

            Comment

            • Dick Hosmer
              Very Senior Member - OFC
              • Aug 2009
              • 5993

              #7
              One of the little internal joys of gun-collecting, finding something that is incredibly rare, yet would be passed over, or even castigated, by 99.9999% of viewers, only looking for appearance and bore condition, and, oh yes, a "deal". Great find - you are the one person who should have that, really, you deserve it, after all your hard work.

              Comment

              • Kragrifle
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 1161

                #8
                Hmmm, if we are including all 1902 dated carbines there will be close to 180. One? No.

                Comment

                • Kragrifle
                  Senior Member
                  • Nov 2010
                  • 1161

                  #9
                  I own two 1902 dated carbines and part of a third. Granted yours would be the highest number as the high number documented is 420810. Still, a great Krag carbine!

                  Comment

                  • 5MadFarmers
                    Senior Member
                    • Nov 2009
                    • 2815

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Kragrifle
                    Hmmm, if we are including all 1902 dated carbines there will be close to 180. One? No.
                    Exactly one was manufactured; no more and no less. Production report is abundantly clear.

                    You're conflating two different things. Manufactured and dated aren't the same thing. 1901 cartouches on 1896 rifles with serials in the expected 1896 range make that clear.

                    Exactly one was manufactured; no more and no less. Production report is abundantly clear.

                    ====

                    I'll cover it. It's key to the M-1896 rifles in the 95-96 report as they are reported as manufactured but do not exist.

                    Springfield Armory was three things:
                    1) Manufacture facility.
                    2) Sales facility.
                    3) Rework facility.

                    In role #1 guns were manufactured. A very specific and detailed report was required on this activity and was duly maintained past WW1. Then dropped. The production records are definitive.
                    In role #2 guns were accepted from manufacture and then either sold to the army or other entities. Those entities could have them inspected and stamped per request.
                    In role #3 guns were accepted for repair. RIA mainly did that for the army. SA typically did it for other agencies.

                    If somebody, Park Service for all I care, wanted a carbine in 1902 they could order one. If they requested it be inspected it would be. That gun would have a 1902 stamp on it. That does not mean it was manufactured in 1902.

                    Stamped <> Manufactured.

                    Sitting in my gun cabinet is a beautiful Magazine Rifle having undergone the first alteration (all M-1896 excepting hold-open pin on extractor and notch in receiver). Perfect 1897 stamp. The gun was clearly not made that year.

                    ====

                    Manufacturing report lists exactly 1 M-1899 carbine manufactured. If you believe that you have a "1902 dated 1899 carbine" I'd like to see a clear, very clear, picture of the model marking and the serial number marking. Stock date, as detailed, is useless for manufacturing. A clean "1899" and a serial number, out of range past the 3rd block guns, is key. No over-strike. As mentioned the production report was clear on one complete manufactured gun. Receivers are always a different issue.

                    Post pictures. Detailed pictures. I'm curious.

                    Comment

                    • Kragrifle
                      Senior Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 1161

                      #11
                      Alas, I don't own 420810.

                      Comment

                      • Kragrifle
                        Senior Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 1161

                        #12
                        From a reliable source, observed 1899 Krag carbine receivers include:
                        420391
                        420457
                        420460
                        420810
                        420969

                        Comment

                        • Dick Hosmer
                          Very Senior Member - OFC
                          • Aug 2009
                          • 5993

                          #13
                          Aha, the red flag has been waved - will the bull charge? Getcher popcorn right here, folks!

                          Looking forward to an informative and spirited discussion.

                          Comment

                          • Kragrifle
                            Senior Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 1161

                            #14
                            ��

                            Comment

                            • 5MadFarmers
                              Senior Member
                              • Nov 2009
                              • 2815

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Kragrifle
                              From a reliable source, observed 1899 Krag carbine receivers include:
                              420391
                              420457
                              420460
                              420810
                              420969
                              From reliable sources, observed WW2 rifles include M1s made by Singer and Vietnam M16s have Mattel stamps on the stocks.

                              Originally posted by 5MadFarmers
                              Post pictures. Detailed pictures. I'm curious.
                              Didn't look like a photo to me. Looked like a bunch of text.

                              Add
                              420945
                              420946
                              420947
                              420948

                              to the list. See, anyone can do that.

                              Pictures. Could they exist? Sure, I'll dumpster dive the receiver for them. Pictures. I've seen enough overstrikes. No overstrikes.

                              =====

                              FY01-02. 20,000 M-1899 carbines. No spare parts receivers. With respect to rifles, 25 spare receivers and 10 receiver/barrel combinations were manufactured.
                              FY02-03. 1 M-1899 carbine manufactured. No spare parts receivers. 3 barrels, 3809 bands, 669 drift slides, etc., The report is detailed. 6 spare rifle receivers were made. Along with 250 M-1896 side plates. 500 M-1896 sight bases. 22,838 spare hand guards.

                              No spare M-1899 receivers in either year. Ergo detailed pictures are needed. It'd provide quite the mystery. Detailed pictures to detect overstamps.

                              Receiver were overstruck both before being completed and after. Those struck before are hard to detect as the metal wasn't finished. Those struck after are easier to detect as the metal is more affected due to the need to soften it first.

                              I have examples of both.
                              Last edited by 5MadFarmers; 06-27-2017, 01:35.

                              Comment

                              Working...