Re: My Son Loves Me :)
Posted: Mon Dec 26, 2011 3:15 am
That is awesome!!! You have a great son!
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My pleasure. It's in great shape and a very, very nice carbine indeed. Also, great meeting the "Annoyed family and the Annoyed dog." I wish I'd spent more time looking at the canvas case though. There is a remote possibility it's an original. Quite rare these days. I'm also doing some more research on the stock, but you may want to post a question about it on the M1 Carbine Forum. let the "real" expert s chime in. Your son gave you a heck of a Christmas gift!The Annoyed Man wrote:Thanks G26ster for coming over today and teaching me so much about this carbine. I can't wait to get it to the range.
Regarding the canvas case, I suspect that it was purchased at the same time as the sling, which you thought was probably not an original milspec part. There are a couple of black "leather" reinforcement gussets on the canvas case that appear to have required the the sacrifice of at least one nauga for its hyde. That would seem to make it very much post-war, although it may be an otherwise faithful reproduction.G26ster wrote:I wish I'd spent more time looking at the canvas case though. There is a remote possibility it's an original. Quite rare these days.
I would take a "real" expert in militaria, especially M1 carbines, to tell. However, the black hyde of the elusive Nauga is a dead give away. I just wished I checked it further, as I was just comparing it to the later knock offs so common these days. It didn't fit that bill, so I was curious. The same is true for the sling. As it is a "C" tip, and not a "D" tip it also might be original. Unlikely, but the same expert as stated above would need to tell you. As I told you the other day, the M1 Carbine market is so flooded with fake Chinese parts, darn near everything is suspect, but sometimes with slings, cases, and other small parts you get lucky. The main fake parts are slings, cases, flip sights, and early type I, IA, and II barrel bands. Reputable sellers will always identify them as a "reproduction." If you're positive you have Naugahyde, then the case is certainly a repro.The Annoyed Man wrote:Regarding the canvas case, I suspect that it was purchased at the same time as the sling, which you thought was probably not an original milspec part. There are a couple of black "leather" reinforcement gussets on the canvas case that appear to have required the the sacrifice of at least one nauga for its hyde. That would seem to make it very much post-war, although it may be an otherwise faithful reproduction.G26ster wrote:I wish I'd spent more time looking at the canvas case though. There is a remote possibility it's an original. Quite rare these days.
+1 from me...I want to see that combo together!74novaman wrote:Now we need pictures of the carbine with the 1911.
Your wish is my command.....jpfrog wrote:+1 from me...I want to see that combo together!74novaman wrote:Now we need pictures of the carbine with the 1911.
If you notice in the picture of the Choate stock in my previous post, the comb of the buttstock is much higher than it it is on the original wooden stock. It's actually more "AR-like." I think that if that stock were used, you wouldn't have to use a raised cheek rest to raise your cheek weld. On my M1A, I had to put a Karsten's cheek rest on it because the buttstock angles downward a bit, just like it does on the M1 Carbine and it was difficult to get a good cheek weld and proper eye-to-scope alignment.G26ster wrote:Just a note however: Regardless of what you mount to that rail, you will need a cheek rest if you desire to regain your spot weld while sighting, as the sight sits much higher than the iron sights.