Krag Carbine Serial Numbers

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Dick Hosmer
    Very Senior Member - OFC
    • Aug 2009
    • 5993

    #16
    Pretty much agree with most of the foregoing, except the bolt cut in the stock. Cannot believe that was done at SA. It would be interesting to see if the barrel shows any sign of having been in a short stock. The long stock (excuse me, that version of long stock) did not exist during the sight trials. Nor did the large binding knob on the sight for that matter (a detail not yet entered into evidence). When I said the "carbine" had probably been together a 'long time', I did not mean to run it all the way back to its' birth at SA. Oh Francis - is this something of yours?

    I'd also agree with leaving it alone, as a bit of a riddle, if nothing else.

    It has already served one good purpose - that of luring our friend Joe out of the shadows once again.
    Last edited by Dick Hosmer; 05-15-2016, 08:22. Reason: speling

    Comment

    • 5MadFarmers
      Senior Member
      • Nov 2009
      • 2815

      #17
      Originally posted by Dick Hosmer
      Pretty much agree with most of the foregoing, except the bolt cut in the stock. Cannot believe that was done at SA.
      Not a question of that. I'll hit it from yet another direction in a moment.

      It would be interesting to see if the barrel shows any sign of having been in a short stock.
      Was checked. Been in that one for ages.

      The long stock (excuse me, that version of long stock)
      M-1896 Type 2 versus M-1899. Exact same profile but a different bolt cut. Two different models. If the M-1899s had not received a model that would be the M-1898c Type 2. Instead M-1898 carbines were rebuilt to M-1899 standard using M-1899 stocks. Model, models, models.

      did not exist during the sight trials.
      Didn't need to. Something they kept around would be used for whatever games they wanted to try next. Proof? The two 1892 carbines didn't retain all of their original bits. After that role was over they played further roles. During which parts were swapped. Neither of them kept their original sights.

      Nor did the large binding knob on the sight for that matter (a detail not yet entered into evidence).
      The 1892c at RIA never left RIA. It sports a sight which didn't exist until well into 1896. The sight didn't go back in time - the gun came forward. Isn't the only part that was swapped later - I checked it.

      When I said the "carbine" had probably been together a 'long time', I did not mean to run it all the way back to its' birth at SA.
      That's what I'm going on about. Trying to wind forward from SA is only one direction. There is the other. In one direction it's:

      [.]

      That dot is the point in time when the Ordnance Store Keeper accepted the gun the first time.

      [.AAAAAAAAASSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB]

      In that line that dot remains. The "A" is army service. To include trips, sometimes multiple, through rebuild. "S" is the surplus dealer and "B" is Bubba. So you're trying to see if it is as it was for that dot. That's going to take you back to 1895. They didn't start peddling them until well after that. Krags were issued in 1917 but I'm not going to digress into that right now. So you can either judge everything based on that dot, in which case you might as well eliminate every gun as none of them stayed there given that "A" thing, or you can figure out something else. "Under government control" works. So the dot and the A. As the carbines were hauled up a certain hill in Cuba they're well past the dot. Does that mean we ignore time in Cuba? Might have already received a replacement Extractor to replace a broken one. "While your gun is documented as having been with the 1st Vol Cav in Cuba we note that the Extractor was changed in 1897, and not at SA I might add, and thus the gun is Bubba!" That doesn't work for me.

      So looking for the dot and only the dot isn't really practical. In previous posts I listed the reasons that wasn't done in the "S" or "B" range. Which means back it up. Not to the dot. Perhaps John Thompson, at whatever Ordnance post he was at in 1903, whittled it so he could see if the O.D. was interested in some novel design idea he had which didn't work out in the end. Pick any theory you'd like, and an exercise in futility, but remember to account for the "B" and "S" as that's really the important bit. What theory you put into that "A" range is theory but it doesn't matter if you get it right. What's more significant is eliminate "S" and "B". Changing it now would put it squarely at the end of that "B" line. Right now it's likely in that dot/A range. Wanting it to be the dot doesn't really add much as none are there really. Every gun that was issued was beyond the dot. The crapload of spare parts they made were made to be used and they were.

      It has already served one good purpose - that of luring our friend Joe out of the shadows once again.
      Not for long though. A certain poster at KCA lowers the level of that board to the useless level. Having done that there they've moved here to do the same. In spite of saying they wouldn't. Four years ago there was intelligent discussion here. That's pretty much gone. I mentioned in a previous post in this thread people reading outdated books and not understanding them. Then insisting on ranges and "made in the year 2525." Nobody that has posted in this thread thus far. I deal with that personality type at work and when I get home if I look at this board now I see those posts. "Do I really want to deal with that in my hobby?" Not after dealing with it all day.

      Dick, you're mentally nimble. Keep posting. Then the other poster can add much noise and completely destroy any possible signal that existed.

      Bounce it off Madsen. He's logical. He's nimble also.

      Comment

      • 11mm
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2010
        • 355

        #18
        I am going to print and keep a copy of this with Farmer's Krag book. It makes a nice addendum.

        Comment

        • 5MadFarmers
          Senior Member
          • Nov 2009
          • 2815

          #19
          I have to go to work shortly but I'm going to add a bit which is not directly related but then again what I'm attempting to do is paint an environment for you. Tunnel vision is a danger.

          Dick, first a small poke. Mind you I like you so this is me chuckling. In looking at the period documents it was "advance frame, snap image, advance frame, snap image, ..." So not really reading it all. Tens of thousands of images. "When I'm retired I'll walk them one by one." Doesn't mean some don't pop out at me as some do. If fact the better half is scary aware of this stuff and she'd point out frames she noted as significant as she's snapping them on the other machine. The following is accurate: when the trapdoors were auctioned off by the army they didn't all contain 100% SA parts. I know as the document grabbed me and made my head explode. It shouldn't have as it was common during WW2. "We need 3,300 of this part to repair guns. Contract it out." I have the WW2 contracts so when I look at WW2 stuff that's a given but I never walked that sideways to 1898. They were short on guns and had many broken trapdoors on hand. SA was busy so they contracted out for a specific part. I don't remember to who or for what, cam latch if I trust my memory, but it was contracted to a commercial firm. Again that was common later but not so much in 1898.

          That's the lead for the next bit. In 1903 they pounded out Krag parts. In massive volume. "For spare parts while they're in Militia service." Then the Dick Act pretty much negated that. Today that's a common practice and the two work in tandem: "We're nearing end of production. Pound out spares then retool. If they run out of spares they can contract for them." Less common at the time. I included an order from RIA to SA in the book for 100 or 200 sets of M-1892 and 100 or 200 M-1896 parts. I've forgotten the volume and am too lazy to dig it out. In any event I included that so people would realized that when the M-1898 was introduced the M-1892 and M-1896 editions still needed to be supported. More importantly SA could still make the parts. They also ordered trapdoor parts and SA still made them. Need a Krag stock in 1906? Order one. They had the template and could put it in their Blanchard at SA and grind one out. They had the tools and dies. When RIA ended M-1903 production they saved all the tools and dies and restarted production elsewhere during WW2. Until that point they still had the ability to make parts if they desired (no need as SA could and was making rifles and parts).

          "Environment."

          Why paint that?

          Because one of the other things I noticed at RIA was a method and pattern to fabrication orders. Normal rebuild work never had fab orders. "Accounting." They couldn't charge it to the unit so no fab order. If a unit broke a gun and sent it in for repair that would result in one as they billed the repair. Again, don't look at this from an "SA manufacturing view" but from a "we're supporting products and bill for it" view. If you only look at the SA manufacturing angle you'll only see what existed at a point in time. Then, like Poyer, you'll want it all linear. "Type 1-19" spread over 10 years. No. In 1902 they needed to keep making M-1896 parts. The guns were in use. They weren't contracting it out so they made the parts.

          I'll close this with a weird analogy.

          Trying to determine if it "left SA that way" is akin to claiming a couple's children are only legitimate if conceived on their honeymoon night.
          Using "under government control" is more akin to seeing the kids as legitimate if they were conceived while the marriage was in force.
          Once the wife was kicked to the curb, it's more "surplus dealer and Bubba" time.

          Ranges and dates are not rules. They're guides. Then we get into the "years" claimed being from books written by authors who:
          1) Didn't find the complete records (I did).
          2) Didn't take into account the spare parts receivers (Frasca is good but missed this too).
          3) Never figured out how many were made in total. (That massive set of spare parts receivers in 1903 bums me but via tracking in the wild guns I have a real good idea).
          4) Did bad math. (Mallory's numbers are based on simple math (total /12 = monthly) and completely ignores the production ramp up for the war).

          Want a list of mistakes in my book? I have a list....

          Knowledge improves over time. Using Mallory at this point is not much different from claiming the world is flat. He too took the SA view - not the "military service."

          He wasn't alone. Those carbine sling swivels are easily found if one doesn't stop at 1903. Run that world to 1920. The USMC didn't give them up until 1910/1911. Thus the Navy Krag loop belts.

          Environment. Don't approach it from manufacturing at SA. Think of it from what you'd see in a repair depot. Then it makes sense. Otherwise it doesn't.
          Last edited by 5MadFarmers; 05-15-2016, 10:26.

          Comment

          • jon_norstog
            Senior Member
            • Sep 2009
            • 3896

            #20
            This is why I stick with this site.

            jn

            Comment

            • 1mark
              Senior Member
              • Sep 2009
              • 390

              #21
              As 11mm said, I am going to print this out and keep with 5mad notes.
              I do enjoy learning more. Cannot not wait until I get another oddity.
              "Three people can keep a secret as long as two of them are dead" Mark Twain

              Comment

              • 5MadFarmers
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2009
                • 2815

                #22
                Originally posted by 5MadFarmers
                300 M-1898 carbines are shipped from RIA to a unit. Two weeks later a trooper is firing one and the receiver, that square cut is a bummer, cracks. Stress from the barrel against that square cut receiver (there is a reason they change things). What nobody had noticed is screwing in the barrel when it was made had started the fracture. It survived some firing but cracked when the trooper fired the 9th round. The gun was sent back to RIA. In almost pristine shape minus that crack. They ordered a spare receiver from SA. SA took one from production, serial 178467, and sent it along. RIA re-assembled the gun on that receiver. In February of 1899. When the unit was due to exchange their M-1898s for M-1899s the Company Commander decided to keep that one for his own use. It was in the best condition. He duly mailed in a check and it became his property. Better than a century later that gun shows up on a board. "I have what appears to be an M-1898 carbine but the serial number is out of range. All the parts seem right. What's up?" To which he's told that Bubba did it or the surplus dealer did it. Thus an M-1898 carbine, which had not been sent in for rebuild, disappears never to be seen again. Amusing bit is, not having gone through rebuild, it's far more "correct" than the bulk of the M-1898 carbines out there which everyone and his brother has had a whack at "restoring." "Your gun is wrong, that receiver dates to 1899. Much too late to be made that way. It's also out of range. It's garbage."
                There is a "Where's Waldo" in there. "In February of 1899" isn't possible as the first batch was made the summer of that year....

                I'm going to add some more random bits. Some directly Krag but some just more for environment lighting.

                Series production of the Krags ended in, off the top of my head, November of 1903. In 1904 they banged some more out. Why? "Because they were told to." Beyond that I don't know. Those guns have lower serial numbers than the serial number on the last Krag assembled in 1903. "Your gun was made in" runs right into a wall there. It took about 6 months, start to finish, to make the parts. By this I mean if metal and lumber were delivered in January you could expect the first guns to pop out in July. Taken from M-1917 information when they were a bit more efficient. So "made" and "assembled" aren't the same. If I took an unissued M-1898 from stock and altered it to a G.P. in 1908 what year is it made? If you answer "1903" you might be correct. When was it assembled? "1903 and 1908." I'd also note that a dude filing parts at a station and dropping them into a wheeled cart, which is then wheeled to the next station, isn't going to be a FIFO affair. Wouldn't be wrong to say the guns "assembled" in the first three months of 1898 were made in 1897. With some parts from 1896 maybe.

                Markings on stocks. I don't remember covering that in the book. The army had a restriction on that. The Militia bought the guns from the O.D.. Sometimes using Federal money and sometimes State. The attention they paid to army restrictions was haphazard at best. If you find a marking on a stock it's most likely????

                In attempting to assemble a "serial/range" for M-1905 bayonets I gave up on those marked RIA from 1917-1919. Why? Because I hit too many 1919 ones with numbers earlier than 1918 and 1917 marked ones. Seriously. Head shaker. Serialized in 1917 and finished in 1917-1919 with it being kind of all over the place. Same Ordnance Department. The overlap in M-1898 rifle receivers and M-1899 carbine receivers is pretty much the same thing.

                When the "school guns" were being supplied to wee kids in the 1910s, the schools were given the option of ordering the parts and having the work done or having the armory/arsenal do it. Thus the level of work will vary.

                "Painting the environment." I use that term. "Sew all the random bits together in odd patterns that point to new patterns." That too. I'm going to do it. Right now. I'm going to sew bits of all the previous bits together in a new way and get a useful result.

                In 1909, having Krags in their armory, a Militia unit might find that they now have 30 broken rifles. They own the guns. Figuring that sending them to the O.D. for repairs might be pricey what's to stop them from ordering new parts and then contracting the repair out to the William "Bubba" Jones's gun emporium?

                So under government control and a Bubba? What if they bought the parts from Bannerman?

                Comment

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

                  #23
                  One of the points you made several years ago still governs everything:

                  Nobody KNOWS everything, for 100% sure, about the components of ANY given gun. Your hypotheses about the 1898 Carbine is clever, entertaining, AND quite plausible. Sorta like your truly masterful 1,000 word reply to the guy who wanted to know when his gun was made.

                  But, I think most of us try to follow some sort of "hierarchy of probability" which means that MOST out-of-range M1898Cs are that way because they actually are FUBAR, the good company commander, and his friends in similar circumstances, notwithstanding.

                  I love it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

                  Comment

                  • 5MadFarmers
                    Senior Member
                    • Nov 2009
                    • 2815

                    #24
                    Originally posted by Dick Hosmer
                    But, I think most of us try to follow some sort of "hierarchy of probability" which means that MOST out-of-range M1898Cs are that way because they actually are FUBAR, the good company commander, and his friends in similar circumstances, notwithstanding.

                    I love it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
                    Good. Because I'm going to continue it.

                    Laugh Dick, it's always disturbing but it is amusing and gets people thinking.


                    MOST out-of-range M1898Cs are that way because they actually are FUBAR,
                    Accurate.

                    And MOST in range M-1898Cs are that way because they actually are FUBAR

                    Also accurate.

                    "How can he claim that?" See the guns, detect the pattern. Where are all the 1898Cs in long stocks? I have the sale paper on those short stocks! Ergo the guns removed from those stocks and altered to M-1899C format were placed in long bar-less stocks. Where are they? They seem strangely absent don't they? This pattern repeated when I looked at them: "checks stock, it's the M-1898C short stock, checks the cut-off, it's the later edition." Mismatch. The gun would have been restocked and that cut-off would be finished bright like the 1899s. "Reworked parts?" They were stripped and refinished. Thus the underside should glow bright like a 1957 Chevy front bumper. I mentioned that in the book. People restocked them but didn't typically get the cut-off bit. Hint: while you're at it you might want to check the trigger parts....

                    Sometimes it's the absence of something that catches the eye. Where are the long stock ones? It would appear that somebody ate them.

                    A new guide. The three types of guns:

                    1) Strange ones. Most likely to be complete.
                    2) The "common" yet in demand ones. Most likely to be mucked up.
                    3) The common and not in demand ones. Likely to not be mucked up.

                    Group one example: the BoOaF rifles. "Make them, test them, toss them into a corner as they're non-standard." They hit the surplus market intact.
                    Group two example: the M-1898 carbines. They get rebuilds and then peddled. They're in demand so they get "restored to original" wholesale.
                    Group three example: the late M-1898 rifles. Not much use and nobody bothers spending the time in attempts to get every bloody piece right.

                    Kind of strange isn't it? Most of what we "know" came from group one. The least typical of the lot.

                    Want to play it safe? Buy a late M-1898 rifle. That or a beat to tar M-1896 rifle.

                    Stay away from M-1896 rifles which started as M-1892 rifles. Why? Because half the people want to replace the M-1892 parts that remained with M-1896 parts while the other have is trying to maximize the M-1892 parts on the gun. One would suspect the two groups would get along famously.
                    Last edited by 5MadFarmers; 05-18-2016, 03:49.

                    Comment

                    • 5MadFarmers
                      Senior Member
                      • Nov 2009
                      • 2815

                      #25
                      Good. Because I'm going to continue it.

                      Laugh Dick, it's always disturbing but it is amusing and gets people thinking.

                      Originally posted by Dick Hosmer
                      MOST out-of-range M1898Cs are that way because they actually are FUBAR, the good company commander, and his friends in similar circumstances, notwithstanding.
                      Accurate.

                      And MOST in range M-1898Cs are that way because they actually are FUBAR

                      Also accurate.

                      "How can he claim that?" See the guns, detect the pattern. Where are all the 1898Cs in long stocks? I have the sale paper on those short stocks! Ergo the guns removed from those stocks and altered to M-1899C format were placed in long bar-less stocks. Where are they? They seem strangely absent don't they? This pattern repeated when I looked at them: "checks stock, it's the M-1898C short stock, checks the cut-off, it's the later edition." Mismatch. The gun would have been restocked and that cut-off would be finished bright like the 1899s. "Reworked parts?" They were stripped and refinished. Thus the underside should glow bright like a 1957 Chevy front bumper. Which on most it does. Ergo rebuilt later when the stocks would be swapped. I mentioned that in the book. People restocked them but didn't typically get the cut-off bit. Hint: while you're at it you might want to check the trigger parts....

                      Sometimes it's the absence of something that catches the eye. Where are the long stock ones? It would appear that somebody ate them.

                      A new guide. The three types of guns:

                      1) Strange ones. Most likely to be complete.
                      2) The "common" yet in demand ones. Most likely to be mucked up.
                      3) The common and not in demand ones. Likely to not be mucked up.

                      Group one example: the BoOaF rifles. "Make them, test them, toss them into a corner as they're non-standard." They hit the surplus market intact.
                      Group two example: the M-1898 carbines. They get rebuilds and then peddled. They're in demand so they get "restored to original" wholesale.
                      Group three example: the late M-1898 rifles. Not much use and nobody bothers spending the time in attempts to get every bloody piece right.

                      Kind of strange isn't it? Most of what we "know" came from group one. The least typical of the lot.

                      Want to play it safe? Buy a late M-1898 rifle. That or a beat to tar M-1896 rifle.

                      Stay away from M-1896 rifles which started as M-1892 rifles. Why? Because half the people want to replace the M-1892 parts that remained with M-1896 parts while the other have is trying to maximize the M-1892 parts on the gun. One would suspect the two groups would get along famously.

                      Note: Corrected cut-off bit. Parts Dyslexia at work
                      Last edited by 5MadFarmers; 05-18-2016, 04:46.

                      Comment

                      Working...