M1 carbines manufactured during WWII that have been thoroughly inspected for serviceability in our shop and then taken to the range for test fire. Service grades have many original parts and may exhibit more early and transitional period features. While many of these rifles could be correct or ...
We are now offering Collectable models of U.S.Military firearms including but not limited to; M1 Garand, M1 Carbine, 1903, 1903/A3, Krag, etc. Some fine quality foreign and Civil War pieces are offered. Watch our collector only gallery pages for most recent updates. *** Rifle ordering in...
Carbine Rifle Body Shoulder Sling and M1 Cartridge Pouch. This meticulously crafted reproduction is designed to embody the ruggedness and functionality of the original gear used by American soldiers during the Second World War. The sling and pouch are made from high-quality canvas, ensuring ...
Fact: civilian carbine sales led to a change in the National Firearms Act in, I think, the early 1960s. The original NFA regulated shotguns and rifles with barrels under 18″. Then, only after the government had sold quite a few M-1 carbines, did someone realize that the carbine’s ba...
Marking -there may be a marking around the perimiter of the buttplate. M1A1 (Paratrooper) carbines have a part number here as well. B257614 is for an original buttplate, 6257614 F is for a postwar replacement buttplate. Photo 3 shows the first variety of M1A1 buttplate. Photo 4 shows ...