I went to go look at this one, since the dealer is close to my home. That a lot of money to spend on my authenticity level of experience. Anyone with a pic of a proper RMC cartouche?
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The firing pin was made for Inland and the extractor for Saginaw Steering Gear. The hammer should be a type 2 dogleg but not with a circle on it. The stock may be a bit late for the serial number but it's close. There are some wrong parts on it and I could not find any record of these parts being shipped to Rock-Ola from other makers.Comment
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I think it is a very sharp looking carbine though some more photos would be nice
In the last 10 years, a lot of carbines have been "corrected" by well-meaning collectors when in fact they were quite original to begin with."Socialism is the Philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy. Its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery." ~Winston ChurchillComment
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Thought I would update this thread. I ended up with the carbine, and it is the real deal. The pictures do not do it justice. It was listed as "arsenal rework" in the ad. The seller thought that the punch mark on the receiver, in front of the rear sight, was an arsenal rework mark. That is why it was listed as such. She supplied me with about 150 pictures, more than enough information to take a chance with a 3 day inspection. It is definately a keeper! Dogleg hammer marks only, front sight has distinctive Rock ola staking (pin never removed). Nice even patina. Rock olas seem hard to figure out, I believe due to the low production #s and the chaos at the factory, according to Larry Ruth. Sure, the extractor and firing pin are not Rock ola, but I think I am going to leave it for now! A Rock ola was to be next years purchase, but sometimes you have to strike when the iron is hot!Comment

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