HOUSTON RICK
Member
The 1903 is a classic, like the Mauser and SMLE, I like Milsurps, but the cost and space made me settle on a Mosin-Nagant, Ishapore and Remington 700 for centerfire bolt action rifles. Thank you for posting.
Someone who knew what they were doing made that stock. Yeah, it deserves a better scope than that Tasco.
I love that rifle. It pisses me off some milsurp nerd could say its “Bubbafied”. Its a work of art to me. Congrats.
That sentiment possibly has some merit today, since the availability of unmolested specimens has dwindled. But, back in the 1950's and '60's, they were a dime a dozen. Also, that was long before everything became "collectible".
What bothers me, though, is that one of the milsurp web sites won't even allow a poster to "Talk" about "sporterizing", even if the gun in question was modified 60 years ago.
One oft-repeated story I heard about Springfield and M1917 rifle blow-ups was post-WWI occupation-duty soldiers fooling around on ranges with US and captured German weapons accidentally chambering and shooting 8mm Mauser rounds in the US rifles.
One oft-repeated story I heard about Springfield and M1917 rifle blow-ups was post-WWI occupation-duty soldiers fooling around on ranges with US and captured German weapons accidentally chambering and shooting 8mm Mauser rounds in the US rifles.
One oft-repeated story I heard about Springfield and M1917 rifle blow-ups was post-WWI occupation-duty soldiers fooling around on ranges with US and captured German weapons accidentally chambering and shooting 8mm Mauser rounds in the US rifles.
It’s an oft-repeated story about the 03s but not one I’ve ever heard about the 1917s…
A few years back, there was a company that was building custom rifles chambered in elephant gun cartridges. They used surplus 1917 actions.
A few years back, there was a company that was building custom rifles chambered in elephant gun cartridges. They used surplus 1917 actions.
The large tab on the left rear of the receiver is not a safety. It is the magazine cut-off lever. When the ON is showing, the magazine functions normally. When it is turned down and the OFF is showing, the magazine is "cut-off", essentially making the rifle a single shot. This was a foolish early-last-century conceit by ordnance officers, hoping it would save ammo if soldiers saved the magazine load for emergencies. The OFF position will keep the bolt from going back far enough to pick up a cartridge from the magazine. The Springfield will function fine as a single-shot because the extractor is beveled and sprung so that it will snap over the rim of a loose cartridge placed in the receiver. Most Mauser-type rifles will not do this reliably. The cartridges must feed from the magazine. As far as most soldiers were concerned, the cut-off did have some value. In the OFF position, the follower of an empty rifle would not pop up and lock open the bolt when performing Inspection Arms. Original military followers had an up-angled rear to lock open the bolt as a positive reminder to soldiers in combat that is was time to grab another stripper-clip and reload. Another way of handling the problem while in garrison was to push a quarter down flat into the magazine and slide it back far enough to keep the follower out of the way.
You’re thinking of Art Alphin and the now defunct A-Square Company. Their Hannibal rifle utilized the 1917 action in all kinds of elephant bashing calibers. He developed the .577 Tyrannosaur and made a handful of those before the company was sold off.
The safety on the 1917 is much better than the Jap rifles, IMNSHO.
True, but there is a lot more to that story. Hatcher's Notebook discusses it fairly thoroughly. The Army conclusively documented that blowups were not the result of improper heat treatment during manufacture. In fact, the early low SN 1903s were never pulled from service by the Army. So any 1903 is OK. But later manufactured 1903s did use different alloys and heat treatment. I have an earlier 1903 (6666xx) that I have fired extensively without incident. It is still in its original military configuration.