that is one nice M1 welcome to the club of M1 ers... Looks like all the wood is matching that is harder to find lately.. If you ever get to CMP you would see almost all the racks are filled with mismatch stock.(when they even have em).Just got a email flyer from them .. you done real real good just by the look of yours....If you can find any greek ammo it is what they use at camp perry for the matches and instruction.I liked it I brought back 2000 rds when I went there.
Last edited by anjdrifter on August 26th, 2007, 1:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Outstanding Norm, very nice find, I am jealous, I am still with out a M1 Garand, I have had a couple, but sold them both, like a dummy I should have kept one, but no, I had to have something else at the time, anyway, Congrats, couldn't have happened to a nicer guy.
guys I got it all apart there was still some Cosmolin left in it ,
I striped the stock raise some of some of the dents in it and just steel wool ed it, now applying 20 year old BLO, I have a gal can of it, this old BLO doesn't have a lot of varnish in it like the new stuff dos also added 25% dark raw Tung oil to the mix witch has no varnish in it at all
Thanks for the follow up on the M1. I cleaned up a Yugo M48 awhile back and did just about the same thing you are doing to the M1, the metal was in good condition [95%] but the stock needed help, and it was loaded with oil and cosmoline,
I cleaned the stock with degreaser and scrubbed it to in'th degree to get the oil and cosmoline out then soaked it in water to raise the dings, etc etc etc, used the steel wool after it dried really good, put a few thin coats of BLO [fairly new stuff] and let it dry for over a week, took it to the range, this was in Port St. Joe, Florida and put about 40 rds through it and the cosmoline started to seep out of the stock from the heat of the barrel, took it back to Ky and did it all over again and finally got all the oil and cosmoline out of it, worse case of cleaning I ever ran across.
By the way, I understand Lakeland had a major fire at one of the electrical substations there, I hope you weren't close by, that goes for Bobby J. too, let us know you guys are OK!!!
Thanks for the follow up on the M1. I cleaned up a Yugo M48 awhile back and did just about the same thing you are doing to the M1, the metal was in good condition [95%] but the stock needed help, and it was loaded with oil and cosmoline,
I cleaned the stock with degreaser and scrubbed it to in'th degree to get the oil and cosmoline out then soaked it in water to raise the dings, etc etc etc, used the steel wool after it dried really good, put a few thin coats of BLO [fairly new stuff] and let it dry for over a week, took it to the range, this was in Port St. Joe, Florida and put about 40 rds through it and the cosmoline started to seep out of the stock from the heat of the barrel, took it back to Ky and did it all over again and finally got all the oil and cosmoline out of it, worse case of cleaning I ever ran across.
By the way, I understand Lakeland had a major fire at one of the electrical substations there, I hope you weren't close by, that goes for Bobby J. too, let us know you guys are OK!!!