Have opp. To buy. 2-13 star bbl w/ D72T on bbl. sn 1234008. 40 26 on bolt handle. No electro pencil number on bolt. Possible prick on receiver rail. No marks on stock. Refinished but very nice, no front swing swivel, band is there. Floor plate looks good compared to rest?
SRS check 1903 NRA Sporter
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A "hit" but, other than "DCM Rifle Sales", it mentions nothing about being a Sporter. Although I confess that NRA Sporters are not my specialty, the shape of the barrel and the bolt does not make it appear to be a sporter.Last edited by Rick the Librarian; 09-23-2013, 05:11."We make men without chests and expect from them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst."
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The rear sight is not correct for an NRA Sporter. The windage scale should be on the back and the aperture hole should have hinged aperture in the front. The sight on the rifle has what I call the shallow base. It is later vintage than the sights that came on the NRA Sporters. The correct sight base would fill the mortised out place in the stock. The barrel date eliminates it as an NRA Sporter barrel as Sporter barrels had not been designed in 1913. The fit of the barrel band might be a clue. The Sporter barrel is a little thicker than the issue barrel so there may be a slight gap between the band and the barrel. The only thing we can say for sure is that it was sold by the DCM in 1930 and that it has a NRA Sporter stock.Last edited by Herschel; 09-24-2013, 08:27.Comment
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The Lyman 48 is a post war II sight with ‘hunter’ knobs and the coil spring locking mechanism. I also believe that the “HO” bolt is a late SA bolt, long after Sporters were discontinued. Hershel is correct in that the Sporter barrel was larger than the standard barrel, and this would cause the upper band to be too large. FWIWComment
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It appears that it was a DCM Sales Service Rifle that someone later converted to NRA Sporter configuration. As mentioned previously, there were no star gage marked barrels with that date, so that part is not original. The barrel, receiver and floor plate assembly of an NRA Sporter would have been rust blued, but that one is phosphate finished (Parkerized).Comment
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111 bolts that i have, look the same way,. SHT bolt, thats not safe for live ammo,.
NRA sporters have the front of the receiver face round above the wood line as well..
likely someone just liked teh NRA sporter look, and made one upif it aint broke...fix it till it finally is.Comment
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If you're talking about the original pictures posted, that is a stock made for an NRA Sporter. The M1922 did not have stock bolts."We make men without chests and expect from them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honor and are shocked to find traitors in our midst."
--C.S. LewisComment

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