My Dream Gun Has Arrived

Nice rifle! As much as i've liked the M1 Garand i just couldn't bring myself to buy one for the price. As for dreams guns....it would have to be all matching numbered with laminate stock G24T (vz24 made during German occupation) or G33/40 and G43/k43
 
My recently acquired 1903 Springfield. New wood and barrel and reparked, it's going to see lots of range time and lead bullets. You know, bullets the way the Lord intended.
4xNensR.jpg
 
I’ll grab some more photos over the next few days. The stock is not cartouched, as it has been refinished over the years, but is a confirmed WW2 surplus stock. I think it does have the uncut rod as well, but I’ll have to further investigate to confirm that.
 
I have one of those Baker 1805s. I had no idea what it was. It’s a bit rough, but it’s complete
Thank you for the info.

Nice M1, they are nice rifles. I sure hope the tyranny does not attempt to take it away

I'd like a 1805 Baker Rifle like this

3A-GR16-Baker-Rifle.jpg

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I just have not found one yet.
 
My recently acquired 1903 Springfield. New wood and barrel and reparked, it's going to see lots of range time and lead bullets. You know, bullets the way the Lord intended.
4xNensR.jpg

If that is the rifle I think it is, I may have built it. Enjoy the rifle :)
 
Thanks, Claven:
It's a nice piece.
It looks like this thread is turning into Springfield ####.
It's not a bad thing, at all, but might grow into a #### measuring contest.
NlBsb6E.jpg
 
Thanks, Claven:
It's a nice piece.
It looks like this thread is turning into Springfield ####.
It's not a bad thing, at all, but might grow into a #### measuring contest.
NlBsb6E.jpg

Great rifles.

Honestly, I'm about 99% sure its one of mine built with all NOS parts on an inter-war SA receiver. I did a few of them over the last 10 years and worked with Vulcan for the parkerizing. They all were fantastic rifles with a lot of attention paid to inletting the NOS GI stocks. I used new barrels and test fired every one, they were great shooters :)
 
I’d like to think that every collector has a certain gun that they’ve always dreamed of owning. For me, that gun has always been the M1 Garand rifle. Thanks to a summer of saving up, I was finally able to add my dream rifle to the collection. Pictured below is my all 1944, SA-produced M1. What’s everyone’s dream surplus gun?

Beautiful! The Garand is also my dream gun, ever since I was a little kid watching Combat reruns on the History channel.
 
My dream rifle is the Pattern 1851 Minié .702 inch Percussion Rifle Musket.

This rifle is in the National Army Museum U.K.

The Pattern 1851 Rifle Musket, or Minié, named after the French inventor of the rifling system, was a major leap forward in the design of the British service arm. Before its introduction in Britain, the Duke of Wellington had been adamant that the 'armament and equipment of each individual soldier should be the best that can be found' and he was consequently urged by the Marquis of Anglesey, Master General of the Ordnance, that all infantry soldiers should carry a rifle. The Duke agreed, on condition that the weight of the bullet should remain the same as the musket ball, that fifty of the new cartridges should weigh no more than sixty of the old, and that it should be named a 'rifled musket', not a rifle, to make clear the distinction between the infantry and rifle regiments. A French and a Belgian Minié were trialed against other firearms and in April 1851 the report concluded that the Belgian Minié was the superior weapon. Four British prototype Miniés were manufactured based on the Belgian design. With Wellington's approval, 500 were then manufactured for testing by ten regiments, selected as having suitable range facilities.

The ammunition of this new weapon was unique. It fired a conical-shaped projectile with a hollow base, fitted with an iron cup, which expanded on firing to take the four rifling grooves in the barrel. This vastly improved range and accuracy.

Externally the Minié is very similar to the Pattern 1842 Musket, but can be distinguished by the elevating tangent backsight, required for firing at greater range. The Minié had an effective range of about 800 yards (731 metres) and played an important role during the early battles of the Crimean War (1854-1856). This particular example is dated 1852.p1851.jpg95599.jpg97509.jpg
 

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Very nice, you do not see the Pattern 1851 very often.

The weapon of the " Thin Red Line ".

From; https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pattern_1853_Enfield

" With war breaking out between the Russians and the Turks, Britain realized that it was only a matter of time before they would be drawn into the conflict. The British Army was in the midst of a significant weapons transformation from smoothbore muskets to rifled muskets. While three of the four divisions of the field army in the Crimea had been supplied with the pattern 1851 Minie rifle-musket, the other regiments of the army around the Empire still carried the 1842 pattern smoothbore musket. By the end of 1853, the Enfield rifle-musket was approved by the War Department for the army and was put into production. The Enfield saw extensive action in the Crimean War, 1854–1856, with the first Enfield rifles being issued to troops from February 1855.[5] "

From; http://www.93rdhighlanders.com/index1.html

" On 25 October 1854 during the Battle of Balaklava in the Crimea the 93rd earned immortal fame standing alone in line and repulsed a massive Russian cavalry charge, thus becoming the one and only "THIN RED LINE". "
 
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