M1903-A3 by Nail Ord?

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  • Merc
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2016
    • 1690

    #1

    M1903-A3 by Nail Ord?

    I went to a gun show today just to look around and saw a pair of nice looking 1944 M1903-A3s for sale. One was a Smith-Corona that had mostly Remington external parts and the other was made by "Nail Ord." that looked all correct and was the nicer of the two. I googled Nail Ord. and found nothing. Anyone familiar with this company?

    Update- National Ordnance (Natl Ord) is the company. The receiver stamping was poorly struck. I found it on another forum that also incorrectly identified the OEM as "Nail Ord" because the stamping on the receiver of the rifle they were looking at was also poorly struck. NOW I can do some digging.

    Update 2 - This company made 03-A3s from milsurp parts in the 1960s for the civilian market and were never issued for military service. No wonder I never heard of them.
    Last edited by Merc; 09-24-2017, 12:21.
  • 1911Ron
    Junior Member
    • Sep 2017
    • 15

    #2
    I sold my National ordnance as soon as i read up on it. See this thread: http://www.milsurps.com/showthread.php?t=16494

    Comment

    • Jiminvirginia
      Senior Member
      • Nov 2013
      • 972

      #3
      Chuckindenver, via this forum, saved me from getting one of those. That and my own research indicates they are ticking time bombs. If you found one for 100.00 with the intent of replacing the receiver it might be a good deal.

      Comment

      • Merc
        Senior Member
        • Feb 2016
        • 1690

        #4
        Originally posted by Jiminvirginia
        Chuckindenver, via this forum, saved me from getting one of those. That and my own research indicates they are ticking time bombs. If you found one for 100.00 with the intent of replacing the receiver it might be a good deal.
        This guy wanted $675.

        Comment

        • p246
          Senior Member
          • Mar 2013
          • 2216

          #5
          Originally posted by Merc
          This guy wanted $675.
          Just looked at one today. Guy said he had a nice 03A3 he couldn't get $500.00 out of. I asked to see it...ah now I know why...He's going to sell the parts and keep the receiver as a paper weight. The stock was cracked to by the way. All parts but barrel band and nose cap were R marked (parts I could see).

          Comment

          • Merc
            Senior Member
            • Feb 2016
            • 1690

            #6
            The one I saw was all blued and had a RA 1944 stamped barrel. I didn't see any stampings on the bolt. The butt plate was uncheckered. The sling and stacking swivels were unmarked. The stock and hand guard were in like new condition but no cartouche or proof marks. The rifle did appear to be in great condition. I could see someone buying it as a parts kit for a few hundred dollars and scrapping the receiver.

            Comment

            • bruce
              Senior Member
              • Sep 2009
              • 3759

              #7
              Have owned and shot two. Bought one for $100, the other for $200. Shot the hound out of the first one. It has been shot w/ corrosive ammo and poorly cleaned. Replaced the barrel and shot it several more years. Stunningly accurate rifle especially with 130 gr. JHP's handloaded hot. Sold it for $300. Far as I know ... it kept shooting just fine. Second one only kept it a couple of years. Shot very well especially with handloads. Sold it b/c I got a good offer. Haven't seen a nice one in a number of years. If found another one at a good price, would buy it, but would not likely shoot it. Plenty of good receivers around. Would strip off the parts, build a receiver. Would take the N.O. receiver and use it for a .22 type rifle using a M-2 bolt, etc. Sincerely. bruce.
              " Unlike most conservatives, libs have no problem exploiting dead children and dancing on their graves."

              Comment

              • Merc
                Senior Member
                • Feb 2016
                • 1690

                #8
                Originally posted by bruce
                Have owned and shot two. Bought one for $100, the other for $200. Shot the hound out of the first one. It has been shot w/ corrosive ammo and poorly cleaned. Replaced the barrel and shot it several more years. Stunningly accurate rifle especially with 130 gr. JHP's handloaded hot. Sold it for $300. Far as I know ... it kept shooting just fine. Second one only kept it a couple of years. Shot very well especially with handloads. Sold it b/c I got a good offer. Haven't seen a nice one in a number of years. If found another one at a good price, would buy it, but would not likely shoot it. Plenty of good receivers around. Would strip off the parts, build a receiver. Would take the N.O. receiver and use it for a .22 type rifle using a M-2 bolt, etc. Sincerely. bruce.
                For $100 or $300, it would probably make sense to buy this rifle if you were planning to replace the receiver and make it a true 03-A3. $675 is a little steep since an original 03-A3 in good condition sells for $700 - $800 around here.

                Comment

                • Jeff L
                  xxxxxxxxx
                  • Aug 2009
                  • 1984

                  #9
                  The receivers are cast, not forged, making them weak.
                  Spam Sniper- one click, one kill.

                  CSP is what you make it.

                  A picture of your gun is worth 1,000 words. A crappy picture is only worth 100.

                  Comment

                  • p246
                    Senior Member
                    • Mar 2013
                    • 2216

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Merc
                    The one I saw was all blued and had a RA 1944 stamped barrel. I didn't see any stampings on the bolt. The butt plate was uncheckered. The sling and stacking swivels were unmarked. The stock and hand guard were in like new condition but no cartouche or proof marks. The rifle did appear to be in great condition. I could see someone buying it as a parts kit for a few hundred dollars and scrapping the receiver.
                    The stock on this one was unmarked and too thick so I think it was an aftermarket of some kind and it was cracked. The barrel was also a 1944 Remington. The butt plate was cast junk. The barrel band wasunmarked and very thin. All the bolt was R marked. The rifle was dark blued. Some good parts, but a lot of National Ord. Junk to.

                    Comment

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

                      #11
                      One of the principals (if not the owner) of National Ordnance was the late Bob Hill, one of the premier Springfield collectors/authorities of the "trapdoor" period. Al Frasca's first book (co-authored with Bob) was largely based on the latter's collection and expertise. Nice guy, one of my mentors in the 1970s-80s - he should have known better.

                      Comment

                      • jgaynor
                        Senior Member
                        • Nov 2009
                        • 1287

                        #12
                        National Ordnance made 03-A3's, M1's, M1 Carbines and Armalite knockoffs. One of the most comprehensive sources of information on the company and its principals can be found at the following link http://www.m1carbinesinc.com/carbine_natord.html

                        (the 03-A3's are discussed on the third page about halfway down)

                        Properly done an investment cast receiver is not necessarily a bad thing. Most Ruger firearms use investment cast receivers.

                        Personally I would avoid firing Ball ammunition in an 03-A3 made by National Ord, Santa Fe, or Golden State.

                        regards.

                        Jim
                        Last edited by jgaynor; 09-26-2017, 07:25.

                        Comment

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

                          #13
                          Thank you for the clarification. Apparently I was misinformed - my info did not come from Bob directly (we only talked trapdoors!!) rather from a source - who occasionally still contributes to Jouster - who knew Bob fairly well in SoCal prior to Bob's move to Carson City NV (where he passed away circa 1997/8). I really miss our discussions, he had amassed a truly world-class Springfield collection.

                          Comment

                          • Merc
                            Senior Member
                            • Feb 2016
                            • 1690

                            #14
                            Originally posted by Jeff L
                            The receivers are cast, not forged, making them weak.
                            I guess product liability issues in the 1960s were not what they are today. Some of their home brewed barrels and receivers were both rupturing and the rifles were never recalled.

                            Comment

                            • Sunray
                              Senior Member
                              • Sep 2009
                              • 3251

                              #15
                              'Nail Ord' is somebody who can't type. National Ordnance were professional Bubba's like Gibbs et al. Took '03A3 receivers and made 'em into 'A4's.
                              Spelling and grammar count!

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