one of us
| I have a low number springfield with a star gauge barrel in near mint condition , now here is the part that gets tricky my gunsmith which is older than the rifle tells me that the marines never scrapped these riles but did continue use them so where did the star gauge barrel come from since the low number springfields pre date these barrels . It must have been used in some sort of marksmanship program and was rebarreled by a goverment armoury . His recomundation to me is as follows since he nor anyone he knows has ever seen a springfield come apart shoot it with the following cautions no magnum calibers and no hot handloads . I personnaly can not make such a claim but will shoot mine anyday . |
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one of us
| Sounds like you don't have an action yet? Thinking of getting a CMP low number one? Personally I would spend the extra money and get a high number one.
It is my understanding that only a few of the low number actions were actually "burnt". If that is so, I believe the bad ones probably have already failed in the 90 years they have been out there. According to Hatcher they broke them by using grease on the bullets of match cartridges. This got in the chamber and increased bolt thrust. Even so why take a chance just to save a few dollars?
Cast bullets, especially with shotgun powders can create pressures that are pretty high, see the large format Lyman manuals. Maybe some day you get a double charge and do actually take it apart. I would much rather have action that will not fragment under those circumstances. |
| Posts: 813 | Location: Left Coast | Registered: 02 November 2000 | 
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One of Us
| I was gonna do the same thing myself. After I thought about it and read up on the subject, I came to the conclusion that a low numbered Springfield might come apart anywhere, anyplace, anytime. Also, after I kick the bucket, where's that rifle gonna eventually wind up? A future unknowing, uninformed owner might wind up getting hurt, or worse. IMO it's just not worth the risk. |
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one of us
| It is now a century since the first low number 1903s were made and in that period enough problems have arisen that IMO they should all be wall hangers if complete rifles or paperweights if actions only. If you have a Numrich .22LR conversion unit that might be a possible way to get some use out of one !!! |
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