RCAF Marked 1903 Springfield

Not a sniper. Some butcher went at the bolt handle with grinder assuming to clear a scope. Pretty sure it was a Springfield sold out of service that Bubba attacked.
 
Can you post a pic of the real deal? I would be genuinely curious to see the difference.

This gun is the "real deal". Why would anyone fake RCAF markings on a rifle that was drilled for a scope mount with a butchered bolt. No money in that which is what the fakers are after.
 
It would have been good to see a before and after. The RCAF stamp raises questions. Like, why is there no "C" Broad arrow and it seems to be the wrong overall shape.

This is a RCAF Canadian issue M1917, The RCAF arrow covers over the top or the C A

From Milsurp com

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From gunsinternational com

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I have pics of the RCAF stamp before it went for refinish. Like I said may look different afterwards but not faked because there would be no point in doing so, IMO.
 
The RCAF stamp is definitely fake.

Wrong font, wrong dimensions, wrong broad arrow angles and size, spacing, length, etc.

You can also tell it wasn't done as one "stamp" but rather by someone using a screw driver blade, or "I" letter stamp to try and get the broad arrow done correctly, but they failed.

I have owned legitimate examples of rifles and bayonets with the "RCAF" cartouch, and seen many original examples. OP's is not one.

Also, some people above asked "why would anyone fake one", well... because it adds value. People will fake almost anything to make a dime.

My experience comes from years of collecting, handling, owning and researching this stuff.

If this rifle had a legitimate stamp under this "new" stamp, someone totally ruined it. Something is only original once.
 
Anyone ever see an RCAF marked Garand? When I went through basic in St Jean’s Que in 1958 our limited musketry was not with Lee Enfields or the incoming FN’s but with Garands. When I asked why I was told because the only bases with a small arms armoury were our four wings in Europe, two in France, two in West Germany. Base and Perimeter security was with American forces and so our armouries were equipped to complement the American forces.
 
The RCAF stamp is definitely fake.

Wrong font, wrong dimensions, wrong broad arrow angles and size, spacing, length, etc.

You can also tell it wasn't done as one "stamp" but rather by someone using a screw driver blade, or "I" letter stamp to try and get the broad arrow done correctly, but they failed.

I have owned legitimate examples of rifles and bayonets with the "RCAF" cartouch, and seen many original examples. OP's is not one.

Also, some people above asked "why would anyone fake one", well... because it adds value. People will fake almost anything to make a dime.

My experience comes from years of collecting, handling, owning and researching this stuff.

If this rifle had a legitimate stamp under this "new" stamp, someone totally ruined it. Something is only original once.
Original pics are in thread RCAF rifles ww2 and beyond. One pic showing Rcaf butt stock marking before refinish. Maybe it is bogus but my friend who owns it said there were two Springfields with identical markings, both drilled on the siderail for scope mounts. Maybe the original pics will be better.
 
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