April 13, 2022, 09:46 AM
P220 SmudgeM1 carbine experts come on in.
Winchester, nice! Congrats, you did well.
April 15, 2022, 04:08 PM
sjtillI have an Inland; can confirm great fun to shoot and to introduce to newbies; but don't expect great accuracy. It seems to deteriorate as the barrel heats up in my limited experience.
Congratulations on the Winchester!!
Another marking to look for is the "cartouche" on the stock.
You may want to buy "War Baby" or one of the other books about the M1 carbine.
April 15, 2022, 08:21 PM
P220 Smudgequote:
Originally posted by sjtill:
I have an Inland; can confirm great fun to shoot and to introduce to newbies; but don't expect great accuracy. It seems to deteriorate as the barrel heats up in my limited experience.
I've been told by someone knowledgeable that a lot of an M1 carbine's accuracy comes from stock fit. A loose, slopped-out stock isn't going to give you great groups. Barrel heating up is another matter, but as fast as I ran rounds through my Inland back when ammo was really cheap and plentiful, I don't recall a lot of stringing. Obviously, mileage varies. I got lucky with the stock fit on mine. It's a high wood that looks to have been babied its whole existence.
April 16, 2022, 10:10 PM
David LeeMine was Saginaw and what a fun little blaster. No 2 pieces of brass land in the same area..
. A dealer friend had a all IBM which he kept 'till he died. He was a IBM retiree.
April 23, 2022, 09:12 AM
Batty67Mine is a tacticool (by me) mixmaster (Quality Hardware) rebuild, re-sprung, and re-parkerized set that is dead nuts reliable. Maybe 2 load/eject issues in 4-5k rounds. Runs like a clock. I like the Hornady and Speer gold dot hunting/SD loads.
April 23, 2022, 09:46 AM
rscalzoquote:
Originally posted by P220 Smudge:
Yeah, that’s no Universal. That’s USGI.
Universal went through several variations. In the early 60's they used mostly GI parts. Their later "hybrid" models used their own modification parts that bore no similarity to the GI. Several companies back then produced identical copies of the Carbine. Plainfield was one that produced mostly identical copies.
I had a later version in the 60's. The quality was ok but not the best. The op rod system was a odd setup. Several unique modifications to the receiver will instantly reveal the manufacturer.
Can't see the marking on the receiver in the photo.