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| Senior Member | newbie needs help! Hi … I am new to this forum and new to the M1 Garand… Can anyone tell me what 4.2 Mil means? It was in the title when I bought it… I have only had it for a few weeks now… I took it to the range the day before yesterday and after I got it dialed in I was getting 5” groups at a 100 yards with muzzle measurement of about 3 and was wondering if this is sounds about right to you guys? It is a 1952 Springfield that was completely restored to new by Springfield Armory (Geneseo)… I haven’t been much of a rifle man lately but this rifle may just take me away form my pistols for a while…. Any info on this rifle for a newbie would be cool… Thanks in advance guys… Noel ![]() ![]() |
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| Senior Member | Welcome to the forum. I would think 4.2 mil refers to the serial number range. For example, serial number 4235897 would be a 4.2 mil SA Garand. A 5" group is not bad, but not great. There are many things you could do to tweak your rifle. What kind of ammo were you using? A Garand advertised as "restored to new" but with an ME of 3 would not be acceptabe to me. Don't get me wrong, it will probably be a great shooter. How do you know the muzzle is a 3? |
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| Senior Member | Perhaps your bullets have too much velocity This does happen sometimes with the Garand when you shoot 150 grain factory loads or lighter bullets. Do not experiment with hot loads as you can bend the metal operating rod in a Garand. If milder loads do not work I would contact the manufacturer as this is a little on the wide mark for a Garand. Last edited by nathangdad; 02-07-2008 at 08:26 AM. Reason: addition |
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| Senior Member | Hi guys and thanks for getting back to me! Quote:
He advertised as a TE mussel with a 3... and honestly I have a OCD about mint guns with restored or not Here’s the whole add for the Rifle Springfield Armory -- M1 Garand 4.2 Mil Refinished w/New Stock This is a refinished M1 Garand. The 4,272,xxx serial puts it some time in 1952. The barrel is marked SA 3 53 so it is most likely the original barrel. TE is about 3 and the muzzle shows quite a bit of bullet. The bore is bright and shiny with good rifling. All the metal parts were sent to Springfield Armory (Geneseo) and were refinished and parkerized to like-new condition. The stock is also new. All major parts are marked SA and are period correct. The safety is stamped MXB. All used firearms should be checked by a qualified gunsmith. This was part of a recent purchase and has not been test fired. I might have to get a new barrel down the line! | |
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| Senior Member | "completely restored to new by Springfield Armory " Probably just means they reparked the metal. 5' at 100yds isn';t to bad if you aren't used to shooting the Garand. Also are you shooting off a bench? If the bottom of the front handgaurd is setting on a bag its gonna throw things off. The bottom of the handgaurd is open and the Op Rod runs through it. If the Op Rod rubs on the bag it can be part of the problem Also what ammo are you using. A barrel with Muzzle Wear of 3 is not a canidate for a rebarrel if the rest of the bore is OK. Remember these are not bench rest target rifles, they were meant to hit a mansized target |
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| Senior Member | Quote:
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| Senior Member | New to the M1 Hi, Noel, Welcome to the wonderful and occasionally wacky world of the M1 Garand! You wrote: Quote:
Hot soapy water is the classic treatment; some guys swear that "Windex" works. I can't swear to that one, as I've not tried it. The Greek surplus "HXP" M2 surplus is noncorrosive, and available direct from the CMP at CMP Home or at a somewhat greater price from Orion 7 Enterprises Inc. Tony Pucci at Orion 7 is good people and will treat you right. Hope this helps. Ben Hartley | |
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| Senior Member | Ben, How do you figure ammo is cheaper from Orion 7 ? They want $60.00 for 192rds and $145.00 for 500 rds Cmp sells the exact same thing for $50.00 for 192rds and 480 rds for $110.00 I do like Orion 7 and have purchased springs from them. They are a good company but don't have the best price on ammo. Ben , I reread your post. Sorry I misunderstood that you were saying Orion7 was higher. Last edited by Orlando; 02-07-2008 at 12:55 PM. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
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| Senior Member | Thanks for the info and the welcome guys… That’s what I thought about the KA too Ben, but some guy somewhere else, Joke Joke… |
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| Senior Member | Quote:
http://www.sportsmansguide.com/net/cb/cb.aspx?a=213903 | |
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| Senior Member | Headstamps starting with "K" Hi again, Noel... OK, your source might very well be correct,and this reference may be out of date, but it's what I've got. Go to Headstamp Codes on Small Arms Ammunition ...and click on "K" at the top. Um... er... don't see any US-loaded ammo in the listing, 'cept "KS" and "KTW," which aren't "KA" by any stretch. I'd still recommend a hot water (or Windex) cleaning. Sure, the M1 Garand was designed for corrosive ammo -- all they had in the early 30's after all -- but there's no point in taking chances! (The Greek stuff -- and Orlando quoted the prices accurately -- is non-corrosive, and probably the best deal around, all things considered.) In passing, I don't own a piece of Tony's business; I steer people that way if they either have not, can not, or don't want to qualify to order from the CMP (Civilian Marksmanship Program. Different subject: you quoted the advertisement from which you purchased the rifle, and it stated "a TE of 3;" you've written it's "an ME of 3." Well, "TE" stands for throat erosion, or the heat/gas-caused wearing away of the bore immediately in front of the chamber. Since there have been brand-spanny-new barrels with a TE of just under 2, you've not much to worry about. "ME," on the other hand -- and properly it's "MW," for muzzle wear -- doesn't appear too bad from the description. The ad states "the muzzle shows quite a bit of bullet." That's using a field-expedient means of measuring the muzzle wear: a bullet is placed into the muzzle "backwards" as it were. "Quite a bit of bullet" indicates that there hasn't been a drastic amount of wear to the muzzle. If the edges of the rifling lands are nice and sharp, there are no scratches in the bore near the muzzle, and no serious nicks/dents on the barrel crown, you're in good shape. I'd suggest you do a good bit more firing to determine just how well your M1 shoots. Remember that the M1 is a service rifle, not a target rifle; as I recall, the Ordnance standard for acceptance was eight rounds into a 4" circle. You're not too far off that. HTH Ben Hartley Last edited by Ben Hartley; 02-07-2008 at 06:59 PM. Reason: added paragraphs, corrected spelling |
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| Senior Member | Hi guys… I sent a reply but it didn’t go through Orlando… The headstamp says HXP on one side and 80 on the other, which is Greek Powder & Cartridge Company, Athens, Greece according to the site Ben pointed out… but sportsman site http://www.sportsmansguide.com/net/cb/cb.aspx?a=213903 states 1970s production, "KA" headstamped. Brass-cased, Boxer-primed, reloadable, 150-grain, full metal jacket. 8 rds. per stripper clip, 48 rds. per bandolier. Approx. 192 rds. per .30 caliber can; 4 bandoliers per can. Muzzle Velocity: 2,910 F.P.S. Muzzle Energy: 2,829 ft.-lbs. I noticed they raised the price $10.00 a can… You really think I need to run some hot water and soap through it Ben…wouldn’t be obvious by now? I have a real problem putting water on metal… how soon would the corrosion show up? |
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| Senior Member | Just what I thought. You have Greek ammo not Korean. Someoen else said they ordered ammo from Sportsmans guide and it was the same ammo that CMP sells. Well you cant blmae you shooting on the ammo anymore Ha. HXP is Non -corrosive! |
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| spiritual counselor ![]() ![]() Join Date: Jul 2006 Location: a secret lab on the shores of lake titicaca
Posts: 10,865
Trader Rating: (0) | Quote:
armies have been doing it for generations. the british issued funnels just for that purpose.
__________________ i'll keep an eye out for ya! Last edited by billy; 02-08-2008 at 05:43 AM. Reason: Automerged Doublepost | |
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| Senior Member | Corrosion Timing... Hi Noel, You asked: Quote:
How soon will damaging corrosion show up? Varies with humidity, mostly. The combustion products from the primer pick up water vapor from the air: the higher the humidity, the more water and the quicker "rust" shows up. The major problem with the HXP will be copper fouling. As a traditionalist, I clean that our with Hoppe's #9, and put a light coat of oil in the bore afterwards. I'd still suggest that you do a good bit more shooting to get that group size down. Um... is there anyone local to you who shoots the M1? Might be worth trying to hook up with a more experienced shooter. Ben Hartley | |
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| Registered User | Did I miss somthing here? Everybody is telling this guy that 3 on the MW isn't too bad. Granted. Read the add Springfield Armory -- M1 Garand 4.2 Mil Refinished w/New Stock This is a refinished M1 Garand. The 4,272,xxx serial puts it some time in 1952. The barrel is marked SA 3 53 so it is most likely the original barrel. TE is about 3 and the muzzle shows quite a bit of bullet. The bore is bright and shiny with good rifling. Looks to me like the THROAT EROSION is a 3. We don't know what the MW is. How much is "quite a bit of bullet"? That could be why the 5" groups. Probably not, just a new guy with a rifle but I had to re-read the thing four times to make sure I wasn't missing something all you guys that were talking about. MW of 3? Where did that come from? Good Luck with your rifle. Go to "battle rifles" on the web. There is a sticky on tightening up that rifle and your groups. AJ Last edited by AJ100; 02-08-2008 at 07:10 PM. Reason: Automerged Doublepost |
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