Late WW2 Springfield M1 Rifle

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  • RCS
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 2180

    #1

    Late WW2 Springfield M1 Rifle

    This rifle was located in a remote area of Wisconsin by a friend who does
    estate sales. Only rifle besides an old shotgun and 22 rifle. There wasn't
    any interest from the locals and the condition was not the best. He called
    and I told him that I would buy it. I got the rifle a few months later, well
    used and not alot of finish but the bore was excellent, Also what was really
    interesting to me is that all the parts were correct for April 1944. later on
    I found out the sale was from a WW2 veteran's estate. I used some ammo
    from different lots both ball and AP, everything worked.dscn1368_0024.jpgdscn1369_0025.jpgdscn1372_0027.jpgdscn1377_0030.jpgdscn1374_0028.jpg
  • Major Tom
    Very Senior Member - OFC
    • Aug 2009
    • 6181

    #2
    Great find that is rare indeed. I own a May 1944 SA garand, but not all original.

    Comment

    • JimF
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2009
      • 1179

      #3
      Originally posted by RCS
      . . . . . I used some ammo
      from different lots both ball and AP, everything worked.
      WOW! . .
      If that target was shot at 100 yards, the rifle is ?a hell-of-a-shooter? . . . .especially with differing lots and types of ammo!

      Comment

      • RCS
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2009
        • 2180

        #4
        Actually I thought it would do better at 100 yards considering it was shot from sandbags. But later checked the bore and the
        T.E. was 5.0. It is a good old WW2 rifle and will work with GI ammo

        Comment

        • Hal O'Peridol
          Senior Member
          • Aug 2009
          • 929

          #5
          You've got a good shooter there. Enjoyable to take out and use without worrying about losing any value like those "all correct" safe queens.
          Enfield, everything else is just a rifle. Unless it's a Garand.

          Long pig, it's what's for Dinner!

          Comment

          • Johnny P
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2009
            • 6259

            #6
            It's the "safe queens" that drive the market. Prices start at the top and work their way down rather than work their way up from the bottom.

            To each his own, whichever it is.

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