Re: What to look for - Springfield 1903A3/Lee Enfield
For the 1903a3, is this going to be a shooter or a collector?
If it is a shooter then I always "buy the bore." Look for the rifles that have been rebuilt after the war, all of their parts are mostly new and they were never really put in service again. These will usually be the "mixmasters" but they shoot great. You will find these to be about $200-$500 cheaper than a collector 03a3.
If it is a collector and occasional shooter you are after then you will want a rifle that is as close to original as possible. This means the bayonet band, stacking swivel, sling swivels, cutoff switch, rear sight bolt, trigger guard and butt plate will all be blued. Only the barrel and receiver will be parkerized. See details here.
1903 details fro Vi shooters page
The finish condition and originality is important. The parkerization will have a greenish tint that is very hard to replicate, if is grey then it is probably refinished.
Check the barrel date vs. the receiver SN to see if it is original to the rifle. All original barrels were made in 1942/43. It is contended that some may have been made in early 44 but most of these that I have seen have been re arsenaled. You can compare SN and BBL dates here.
http://vishooter.home.att.net/RA3.txt
The stock will have an "S" stock with no finger grooves. This means the stock is straight with no pistol grip of any kind. If it has a pistol grip or a half pistol grip "scant" stock then it is a replacement stock. The stock should appeear to be 60+ years old! Look for honest wear, there are a bunch of fakes out there!! On the left side of the stock there will be some cartouches. Look for an FJA and crossed cannons on early rifles and the same plus an RA on mid to late production rifles. The RA was added when Smith Corona started building these. In front of the trigger guard there should be a series of inspection stamps in the wood. Some stocks will have a flaming bomb at the very end under the barrel. There will also be a Circl P on the pistol grip. If there is a 2nd P with no circle then the rifle was proof fired at an arsenal after the war, usually indicates a rebarrel. Look for any of these markings (listed below) on the stock, they indicate the rifle at least passed through an arsenal, doesn't neccesarily mean it was rebuilt.
Arsenal overhaul and inspection stamps:
AA = Augusta Arsenal
AN/ANAD = Anniston Army Depot (Anniston, Alabama) observed with a date stamp following it (MM YY) in 1975 and 1977
BA = Benecia Arsenal
MR = Mt Rainer Ordnance Depot
OG = Ogden Arsenal
RA = Raritan Arsenal
RIA = Rock Island Arsenal
RRA = Red River Arsenal
SA = Springfield Arsenal
SAA = San Antonio Arsenal
On Remingtons all of the small parts will be stamped with an "R."
Sorry this was so long, hope it adds to the info above. You will love these rifles but be prepared to Man up when you pull the trigger on one of these ol girls, they kick like a mule. Average soldier in WW2 was 5'7" and 140 lbs, I am sure a coule ended up on their ass!!!