saddler wrote:huntervixen wrote:Hi Paul,
I see yours is based on the pre overhaul and upgrade M1, with the original fire selector and missing the bayonet bar.
almost
NOTE the late tangent sight & 4 hole handguard
IF I was putting cash down for such an item it'd HAVE to have: L-shaped rearsight / 2 hole handguard / early safety catch...
& WTF is a
"fire selector"??
M2 carbine - maybe = M1 carbine - yer havin a larf!!

saddler wrote:huntervixen wrote:Hi Paul,
I see yours is based on the pre overhaul and upgrade M1, with the original fire selector and missing the bayonet bar.
almost
NOTE the late tangent sight & 4 hole handguard
IF I was putting cash down for such an item it'd HAVE to have: L-shaped rearsight / 2 hole handguard / early safety catch...
& WTF is a
"fire selector"??
M2 carbine - maybe = M1 carbine - yer havin a larf!!

Saddler,
I think that by 'fireselector' Huntervixen meant the safety which is the early arrangement on mine.
I don't have my copy of War Baby with me, but if I remember correctly, the first wartime replacement site for the flip or L shaped sight, had a body which pressed and folded steel like mine. Later on that was replaced by the cast bodied type - a cr*ppier sight - I have one and it is very loose. I also have the L shaped flip type but it shoots high with that in place.
Don't get me started on the Rivet counting bit......made by the Shelton Tubular Rivet Company incidentally (I even have the T Shirt) :lol: :lol:
Early war versions should have a skinny stock with one rivet per side on the handguard. The pot belly stock with 4 rivet handguards replaced this 'cos it was stronger and then was adapted for the M2 with a small cutaway for the selector switch. There were other differences with early manufactured weapons but fairly extensive so best left for now.
Original skinny stocks are few and far between and expensive if you ever found one. I broke mine whilst shooting as I mentioned before. There was a glut of M2 stocks around until not too long ago and mine has one of those. I have seen pot belly stocks without the cutaways and I believe these to be late war as per some period WW2 photo's I've seen.
So, I think that mine is fairly representative of a carbine in use late war despite the push button safety - in other words, it would have been an Armoury special.
As said before, great fun to shoot even as a straight pull......I'm trying to convince myself that not having a semi version is a good thing because I know I'd get through a lot more ammo' if it was
Cheers
PaulR
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