M1 garand questions

andygumpers

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Hey there I just bought a m1 Garand rifle and I was wondering how much is a complete m1 Garand in used but good condition is worth . The rifling is really good and there is not a hole lot of ware. The serial number is in the 550,000 range does this make it more desirable to collectors ? And also I think the rear sight has been changed witch one should it have ? Thanks Andrew
 
andygumpers said:
Hey there I just bought a m1 Garand rifle and I was wondering how much is a complete m1 Garand in used but good condition is worth . The rifling is really good and there is not a hole lot of ware. The serial number is in the 550,000 range does this make it more desirable to collectors ? And also I think the rear sight has been changed witch one should it have ? Thanks Andrew


What make is it? S/N's can be researched here htt_p://www.jouster.com/serial/assigned.html

Value is based on condition. A fair price for an average shooter seems to be around 600-700
 
There truly is something about the M-1 that no other rifle has.
The rifle was designed by John C. Garand, who was born and raised in Quebec(the guys on U.S. forums tend to ignore that). It was made to shoot .30 M1 ammo with its 174.5 grain bullet at 2647fps, not .30 M2 ammo and its 152 grain bullet at 2700fps, later raised to 2800fps to match the ballistics of the .30 AP . However, they really like 165 grain hunting bullets or 168 grain match bullets. Both using IMR4064 powder. Commercial factory 150's will do for plinking. Stay away from the Hornady 'Light Magnums', despite what Hornady says. You do have some clips?
"...more desirable to collectors..." Not really. Your rifle is a wartime production rifle. That is desirable to some U.S. collectors/shooters, but it's just another M-1, up here. It's worth whatever you paid for it. And no you can't sell it to a guy in the States for a profit. Their Federal law won't let it in.
"...think the rear sight has been changed..." Hard to tell if it has been changed without a picture. However, few aftermarket sight makers bother with M-1 sights as the issue sights are very good. There is such a thing as a Match Sight set though. They have a small rear peep and a thinner(.060" wide) front blade. It's unlikely you have match sights though.
Go to .surplusrifle.com(add the W's) and scroll down to the U.S. M1 Garand. There's tons of good info. Note the links on the right.
Suggest you buy a copy of Hatcher's Book of the Garand. Your local gun shop or Amazon. It gives you the entire history of the rifle's developement. General Hatcher was working at the Springfield Armoury when the rifle was being developed and tested. His books are a good read too. The man could write.
Get a copy of Hatcher's Notebook too. Covers all kinds of shooting related stuff. Mostly military rifles, but there's lots of general info too.
 
Depending on which book/website you read, Garand's family moved to the US when he was either 8 or 12 years old.
Just think for a minute... what would have happened had his family stayed in Quebec...
 
freddo said:
Depending on which book/website you read, Garand's family moved to the US when he was either 8 or 12 years old.
Just think for a minute... what would have happened had his family stayed in Quebec...

He might have invented the snowmobile!:canadaFlag:
 
Andrew: Run away! You cannot hang on to that range of serial numbers. Quick, you'll have to unload it right away. I'll offer what you paid for it, STAT!

Just joking. You are lucky. Hang on to that wonderful creation of Jean C. Garand.

I'm just yankin' your chain (in great jealousy)....
 
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