Fatbob Frank
Well-Known Member
Sort of. The M14 was the military rifle.Noob question, is that an M14?
Springfield Armory calls the civilian variants M1As
This one is the short SOCOM 16 vesion.
Sponsored
Sort of. The M14 was the military rifle.Noob question, is that an M14?
that looks like one of those old british/belgian bulldog guns, 1880-1920s or something. Shot president garfield with oneJust stumbled across this thread. Anyone out there able to shed some light on this piece? It just showed up one day and I know absolutely nothing about it.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
It appears to be a Belgian Bulldog, a knockoff of the American Frontier Bulldog. The “R” with crown over it is a Belgian proof mark.Just stumbled across this thread. Anyone out there able to shed some light on this piece? It just showed up one day and I know absolutely nothing about it.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
That might be the gun that Shot Teddy Roosevelt....Just stumbled across this thread. Anyone out there able to shed some light on this piece? It just showed up one day and I know absolutely nothing about it.
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Here is a Smith Corona 1903A3 that I restored, I acquired it thru an Estate Auction and it has all matching numbers
![]()
![]()
From me looking up the serial # its from 1944, I was told by the husbands wife from the estate her husband purchased it thru mail order from some magazine back in the 60’s-70’sA3 would be late production. The made some changes to enhance production. The triggerguard and floorplate on the A3 were made by metal stamping and the rifling went from 6 groove to 2 groove. Springfield 1903 rifles were the go-to bolt action gun for sporterizing in the post war era. My father bought one of the A1 rifles, made in the Springfield Arsenal at Rock Island, that look very similar, from a Gambles Drug store in Glasgow MT in around 1962. A few years later, we were stationed (USAF) in Yokota Japan, where he found a really old school gunsmith that sporterized it. That gunsmith used a Philipine mohogany that was so prevalent in the day/area. I restocked that gun myself in the late 70s, with a nice feather California Black Walnut blank and replaced the cheap scope and rings with Redfield base/rings and a Leupold scope. It's still in the safe. I hunted with it for a few years. With my handloads it could put 5 shots into about 1 1/4". So, those old guns could shoot.
Great to see one still in original configuration. So many were modified over the decades that there are fewer and fewer around