Figured some may want to keep these pictures for comparison if you see a fake and want to show some one the difference if one o fthese ends up on a gun for sale as orignal.. Rick B
Keep these fakes for reference
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Comes with genuine fake inspection stamps - wonderful. *(NOT!)"We make men without chests and expect from them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst."
--C.S. LewisComment
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I don't know, I wouldn't mind having one for the purpose of using a spare 1896 receiver and carbine barrel to build a classy knockaround rifle- one I wouldn't cry over if I mucked it up while hunting with it. Biggest complaint is the price of the stocks, aside from the fact that someone, somewhere, will use one to pass off a fake as an original. Re-ennactors will probably take a shine to them also- nothing like having a factory fresh rifle to portray a SAW trooper who, incidentally, would have been carrying a factory fresh rifle back then, not a 115 year old patinized example. These stocks do have their place.
Do they open up avenues of fakery? Yes. Should we ratchet up our diligence? Maybe. Should newbie collectors learn about such things before taking the plunge? Definitely- but there's nothing new under the sun in that regard anyway. There has always been fraudulence in every field of collecting. (I know of a guy who is faking antique beer can openers. Some rare 'church keys' from obscure breweries bring big bucks from guys who collect the things.) Caveat Emptor.Comment
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Not very good workmanship there - over-sanded, proper curvatures lost, varying grooves, bad stamping, lousy finish, etc. I believe that at least part of the problem is the use of lightweight "Home Depot" grade duplicators which flex under the stress of cutting a dense wood.
Probably, the cartouches bother me the most - as do the a$$holes who have been renting them out for the last few years. While I can see a re-enactor need, I do not know how to provide for same without opening the door to future chicanery.Comment
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There's no need to ever duplicate an inspection stamp on a rifle. The moment that you enhance a marking, it devalues the rifle forever. Why would anyone with a brain do this? If a person cannot find a rifle with clean readable stampings, then they should keep looking for one. That's the thrill of collecting. Not producing something that's a fake just to say that they've got something. That isn't any part of collecting. What's the thrill or fun of that? It's like renting some hot looking whore out to be seen on one's arm in public. She's still a whore. You're not impressing any serious collector. Just who are you trying to impress?Comment
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+1, Fred, my rationale EXACTLY!!!!!!!!!! WHO ARE YOU EFFING KIDDING, GUYS?? Talk about mental illness - sheeeeesh!!!!!!!!!!!!!There's no need to ever duplicate an inspection stamp on a rifle. The moment that you enhance a marking, it devalues the rifle forever. Why would anyone with a brain do this? If a person cannot find a rifle with clean readable stampings, then they should keep looking for one. That's the thrill of collecting. Not producing something that's a fake just to say that they've got something. That isn't any part of collecting. What's the thrill or fun of that? It's like renting some hot looking whore out to be seen on one's arm in public. She's still a whore. You're not impressing any serious collector. Just who are you trying to impress?Comment
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I still shake my head over a thread on "reproduction" stamps on CMP a year or two ago - about 35 posts, all but maybe 6-8 not seeing what the problem with them was or telling to mind my own business!
"We make men without chests and expect from them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst."
--C.S. LewisComment
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Well Rick you know me and I have no problem going after these folks and smacking the idiots around who find nothing wrong with it. I have had my name attacked, my family and my business to which I invited lawsuits and a good go around behind my barn if anyone had enough testi's to try. So far no takers and two tries at lawsuits with no luck on their parts.
Rick B
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I cannot understand the attraction a fake stamp on a stock has for anyone who professes to be a collector. The very presence of such a stamping negates forever any possible value or collectibility of that firearm. Just as a phony $100.00 bill isn't worth the paper it's printed on. Such a stamp won't fool anyone truly knowledgeable of the subject and will only lower ones standing in the collecting fraternity. You can dress a pig up in a silk dress and put lipstick on it, but you only end up with a rediculous looking pig and make a fool of yourself. Oh and as a famous person once said, you only annoy the pig. No, I don't think that everyone who uses such a stamp is out to rip somebody off financially, I just feel that they aren't thinking it all the way through. What are they gaining? Nobody whose knowledge is instrumental in the world of U.S. Krag's and 1903's is going to be fooled or impressed. It's those very people, who's purchases, trades and sales of such firearms, who are instrumental in establishing the ever evolving collectors value of those firearms. That is what Flayderman's Price Guide is based upon. Now if anyone wishes to develop another and separate group of Krags and 1903's with fake stamps and features, then that's OK. Get together and have fun. However those firearms will never have a place in the world of original U.S. Firearms or their values. If some folks spent as much time in searching for and finding original and unaltered legitimate rifles as they do in creating copies, they'd really have something. Such original and fine examples are not that difficult to find. Many are not expensive if one keeps looking for them. That's a good part of what is in the thrill of collecting. The search. That's why they keep going up in collector's value. It's the difficulty in finding them. You guys who have finally found and acquired a special and long sought after gun know about that.Last edited by Fred; 09-19-2013, 08:13.Comment
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Rick, if you ever need a "character" reference or anything else I can do for you (which may not be much), please let me know. You shouldn't be punished for telling the truth!Well Rick you know me and I have no problem going after these folks and smacking the idiots around who find nothing wrong with it. I have had my name attacked, my family and my business to which I invited lawsuits and a good go around behind my barn if anyone had enough testi's to try. So far no takers and two tries at lawsuits with no luck on their parts.
Rick B"We make men without chests and expect from them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst."
--C.S. LewisComment
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Awful pricey for a repro stock with a fake cartouche that will be used to fake a correct rifle... although I suspect someone wanting to "Fake" a carbine or other valuable Krag won't mind spending the money. I'm with Dick and Fred. Just say NO!!!"I was home... What happened? What the Hell Happened?" - MM1 Jacob Holman, USS San PabloComment
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My 1898 is 100% correct and can be traced to 1917/18 France in the Great War with certainty. It also has no visible cartouche (the Proof is still visible). Whether this is because of sanding or stock replacement during an arsenal rebuild - who can say. I will say, however, that I would never DREAM of having a fake stamp added. First of all, the Krag has history in it's lineage... and second, it is far and away my favorite rifle. To modify or otherwise fake something on it would be sacrilege!"I was home... What happened? What the Hell Happened?" - MM1 Jacob Holman, USS San PabloComment

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