I recently arrived in Arizona, and joined up with the local (walking distance) VFW Post. As they were grabbing warm bodies for the Memorial Day Honor Guard firing team, i was selected. During the ceremonies, one of the CMP Garands had a failure to fire with the supplied blank ammunition.
When the ceremony had ended, I gave the rifle a once-over, and it was very stiff and sluggish to handle, so I asked when it/they had last been cleaned. The answer was 'never', and the rifles were being fired several times a year over several previous years. So I offered to examine, clean, and refurbish the rifles as needed. I got the go-ahead, and have worked on about half of the allotment of M-1's.
The bores were, puzzlingly, hardly an issue. It appears that the current issue of (crimped) blanks are very clean burning and are also non-corrosive.
The 'lubricant' had dried to the consistency of thick molasses, was clear as glass, and sticky. Very sticky. The failure to fire was caused by the firing pin being literally bonded into the bolt by congealed lubricant
Also, the stocks are not GI walnut, and may not be GI anything. They appear to be commercial replicas, lack the cleaning rod wells, are oddly (thick) shaped through the grip area, and are made from what I suspect is Birch The "finish" is a water soluble opaque red/brown stain that had not penetrated the wood at all, and has been scratched off completely in some areas off from normal handling, revealing bare white wood.
I told them the process would take some time due to the need for complete disassembly and soaking of the metal bits, and that stock refinishing was likely needed. .I was told to "go for it".
Half of the rifles have been detail stripped, rust treated in the interior areas, and spot blued (Brownell's 44/40 Gel) where rust had appeared inside. I made up a home brew mix of (Hoppe's version of) CLP, Hoppe's Oil, and a small increment of Rig preservative grease, which has been applied to all the accessible metal.
The stocks have been steel wool stripped, stained a light reddish brown that brings out the grain very strikingly, and treated with a hand rubbed Boiled Linseed Oil Finish.
Night and Day. So far, approved and appreciated, and the work continues.
This is not a restoration. It is an effort to bring some blank firing adapted semi-replica parade pieces to an acceptable level of appearance.
Greg
When the ceremony had ended, I gave the rifle a once-over, and it was very stiff and sluggish to handle, so I asked when it/they had last been cleaned. The answer was 'never', and the rifles were being fired several times a year over several previous years. So I offered to examine, clean, and refurbish the rifles as needed. I got the go-ahead, and have worked on about half of the allotment of M-1's.
The bores were, puzzlingly, hardly an issue. It appears that the current issue of (crimped) blanks are very clean burning and are also non-corrosive.
The 'lubricant' had dried to the consistency of thick molasses, was clear as glass, and sticky. Very sticky. The failure to fire was caused by the firing pin being literally bonded into the bolt by congealed lubricant
Also, the stocks are not GI walnut, and may not be GI anything. They appear to be commercial replicas, lack the cleaning rod wells, are oddly (thick) shaped through the grip area, and are made from what I suspect is Birch The "finish" is a water soluble opaque red/brown stain that had not penetrated the wood at all, and has been scratched off completely in some areas off from normal handling, revealing bare white wood.
I told them the process would take some time due to the need for complete disassembly and soaking of the metal bits, and that stock refinishing was likely needed. .I was told to "go for it".
Half of the rifles have been detail stripped, rust treated in the interior areas, and spot blued (Brownell's 44/40 Gel) where rust had appeared inside. I made up a home brew mix of (Hoppe's version of) CLP, Hoppe's Oil, and a small increment of Rig preservative grease, which has been applied to all the accessible metal.
The stocks have been steel wool stripped, stained a light reddish brown that brings out the grain very strikingly, and treated with a hand rubbed Boiled Linseed Oil Finish.
Night and Day. So far, approved and appreciated, and the work continues.
This is not a restoration. It is an effort to bring some blank firing adapted semi-replica parade pieces to an acceptable level of appearance.
Greg
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