Would love to get one of those.... My dad fought in WW2 with an M1, and kept one always at the ready his whole life..... Shot it many, many times as a kid.... 👌😎
@@kevinlor5986 oh, Yes sir! I'll keep my opinions to myself so that chumps like you can be happy about your purchases and dont have to feel bad about being a sucker.
I'm jealous of you guys getting these carbines and choose which to keep, which to sell. I'm glad I got mine fror a fair price, but had to replace parts to make it some what functional.
Also Underwood made quite a few barrels for other manufactures, so it if the receiver said Rock Ola and the barrel said Underwood the gun would still be factory correct.
LOVE my Winchester M1 Carbine, ammo and mags are in abundant supply if ya know where to look! So much so I just bought an Enforcer kit I’m gonna built, now to figure a way to attach a Sig Brace to the Enforcer pistol 👍
I thought their was an article floating around awhile ago that claimed the land lease garands and carbines were bought by South Korea as we gave them the opportunity too
I'd love to get a postal meter and singer sewing machine.. Interesting cheviot the saying like a singer sewing machine came from The m1s not the actual sewing machines.
For sure they are, the big inventory numbers painted/written on the stocks are very consistent with the Ethiopian stockpile. Which means you can save some money by going directly to the source (Royal Tiger).
National Postal Meter never made its own Barrels so if the Barrel Year matches the Serial Year it is 99.99 % the original barrel. same with many of the oddball manufatures.
Wow... before you buy from classic for $1400 . Probably want to save yourself $400 and go over to the source at Royal tiger Imports and buy the same rifle there for $999. Crazy.
These are a great weapon, there were so many manufacturers of these weapons. I own two M1 carbines, one is a Standard Product, the other is a Quality Hardware, both made in 1943. Freedom and liberty 🇺🇲
you cannot post links but still you could put a description of the video for those who are not fluent in English and want to understand some details of your good videos👍 an enthusiast from Italy (land of prohibitions😞)
The story they tell us is "I was made about 80 years ago, been through a few wars and even a world war, had hundreds of thousands of rounds shot through me and after spending last 20 years gathering dust, even though I cost $52.49 new, I'll be sold buy a guy who calls every gun he touches "sweet" no matter how thrashed it may be, as a very overpriced and very used gun.