I have an RIA single bolt CN1909 stock w/ high hump handguard. Pretty beat up, with a brass pin repair on the wrist of the stock, and one on the hump of the handguard. Now before you say Greek return, there is no last 4 digits on the rhs of the stock. I'm curious if anybody else used brass repair pins, possibly as a field expedient repair...............?
Repair Pins
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Although I can't document this, I have seen brass pins used to repair gunstocks as far back as Brown Bess muzzleloaders. The brass pins were stronger than wood dowels and didn't rust like iron nails. In my opinion this repair is just a repair and is no indication it was done by the Greeks or some USMC armorer on Guadalcanal.Last edited by RED; 06-06-2017, 07:17. -
Back in the day when you could order rifles and parts from the Director of Civilian marksmanship, those brass pins were available and there were two diameters available. I still have several bags of them somewhere, but have never had to use them for stock repairs. I think the "threads" on the pins were square sectioned.Comment
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Very well stated RED. I agree 100%.Although I can't document this, I have seen brass pins used to repair gunstocks as far back as Brown Bess muzzleloaders. The brass pins were stronger than wood dowels and didn't rust like iron nails. In my opinion this repair is just a repair and is no indication it was done by the Greeks or some USMC armorer on Guadalcanal.Comment
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The Greeks did not use brass repair pins. They used wooden biscuits.I have an RIA single bolt CN1909 stock w/ high hump handguard. Pretty beat up, with a brass pin repair on the wrist of the stock, and one on the hump of the handguard. Now before you say Greek return, there is no last 4 digits on the rhs of the stock. I'm curious if anybody else used brass repair pins, possibly as a field expedient repair...............?
J.B.Comment
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The USGI repair "brass pins" are not pins, they are screws. You screw them in and cut off the exposed head.Comment
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