emmagee1917

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Everything posted by emmagee1917

  1. SPF to mbpope . Thanks to all who looked . Chris
  2. Good morning gentlemen . I've been away for awhile because I sold off most of my gun collection of 40+ years over the last 3-4 years , including my 1941 Johnson . I've been going through all the small stuff I still have , and I came across a small lot of Johnson parts . I'd like to sell them as one lot for $250 OBO delivered to the lower 48 . The lot includes one Numrich repo rear sight , 1 original rear sigh with a J. Scott sight block , the cut up original block , barrel latch assembly , 4 extractors , magazine spring , two cross pins with spring , and a small assortment of screws , pins , and springs which I've forgotten what they are , but I hope the pictures will allow you to identify . Thanks for looking . You can e-mail me at ottsparts (AT) Hotmail (DOT) com . Chris
  3. Wouldn't you know it , just after I sold off all my magazines ! Chris
  4. Gentlemen : I have decided that my quest to aquire a JLM is just not in the cards . I am offering up for sale my lot of 20 magazines I bought decades ago . I believe I paid $50 each for them back in the '80s . I would like to get my money back , but I am open to any offers . Shipping would be at actual cost . http://s296.photobucket.com/user/emmagee1917/library/1941%20Johnson%20magazines Thanks , Chris
  5. Will do , It's yours if he doesn't snag it . Chris
  6. I found one more stray mag , Joseph . It's not worth the shipping to send just one . Are you going to the SAR show in Dec. ? I can deliver it to you there . Chris
  7. Mags are all sold to Joseph . Thanks for your help , Brian. Chris
  8. PM sent
  9. Thanks for the info . I guess I'll take any reasonable offer on them then . Chris
  10. No intrest at all ? Chris
  11. I don't believe anyone has posted these . If they have been , I'm sorry for the duplicate post . Rifle for sale , first item listed : http://www.legacy-collectibles.com/ww2-collectibles/rifles/us/ Bayonet for sale , about 12th item listed : http://www.legacy-collectibles.com/ww2-collectibles/edged-weapons/ I don't own the store nor do I work for them ( though I think I'd love to be thier test - firer , by golly ) . Chris
  12. The cheeks were added " later " as a step of the manufacturing process , not " later " as at somewhere else . No rifle left the factory with an incomplete stock. Chris
  13. Ummmm.....The bolt stop is the little barrel shaped block aft of the bolt and forward of the bolt stop plate . While I don't know for sure , I would think it would be most unwise to pull the trigger on a gun without one. Chris
  14. Actually , the M1 was designed for the 172 gr load . The return to the 150 gr load had nothing to do with the Garand . We found in WW1 that our 150gr load did not have the long range punch of the other MG ammo , ie , we were out gunned . The 172 gr load was developed so that we could have machine gun " artillery " . The WW1 surplus was so great that the 172 load really was not issued till the mid 30s . By then we had moved on past using the MG for artillery and the need for the M1 round was gone . The M1 round started to be issued . It kicked a lot more and scores dropped . It also went further , and problems of stray rounds leaving the ranges and falling outside of them lead to the M2 development and reintroduction of the 150 gr load . With the lack of need , poor scores , and range problems , the M2 became the issued round . The M1 was dropped and Garand adjusted his M1 slightly to be reliable with the M2 ammo . Chris
  15. I've had the urge to make / buy a 1941 JLMG semi-copy for quite some time . I'd be interested in your rifle at $1200 . I'd pay the frt and dealer fee on my end . You can keep the scope and mounts. Chris
  16. The rifle wasn't made till a hundred years after him . What I want to know is if'n there was a skeleton up in the tree and a big bear skeleton at it's base. Chris
  17. I may be wrong , but I believe when we replaced my front sight and installed the lug I bought from Joesph , my gunsmith used AR-15 front sight pins to install . Chris
  18. I'm afraid I spent more than your range back in '05 for a very nice one , and that was a bargain price back then .You are prob'ly going to have to raise your price range or lower your expect ions unless you stumble onto someone who either doesn't know the value of what they have or has to have $$$ right now . You might luck out , I picked up a 520-30 trench with no handguard and a rubber pad for $150. Butt plate that fit exactly was $25 ( went through a box of about 30 before finding a match , stock had not been cut ) . Then about 10 years later I stumbled on a handguard for $ 300 . So for $475 I have a trench gun worth several thousand . Good luck . Chris
  19. No new owner yet . Up to $3000 but reserve not met . I think he has pie-in -the -sky expectations . Chris
  20. +1 to the above . I striped and cleaned my mag and reassembled that spring up-side-down . Would not load a full 10 rounds , 8-9 max . Chris
  21. Cutting was done , but not to any great extent. The stateside based armorers were " old salts " brought up on the '03 , so they did some Reisings and prob'ly a few Johnsons that they could get thier hands on . A few individuals did it to get more light around the sight under jungle conditions , but most did not . I recall that back in the '70s and '80s , Johnsons were common and narley a one had cut sights . A few months after it was " revieled " that cut sights was " proof " of USMC ownership , narley a one had uncut sights . Draw your own conclusions from this little fact. Chris
  22. It would be impossible for us to know for sure , but.... He did enter the Corp in 1942. He did join the paramarines , one of the few outfits that had Johnsons at that time. He was in the Bougainville fight and so could have carried one. He was made an officer. It is a known fact that after the Johnsons were removed from the units , many " old salts " kept thiers . Although technically frowned upon , several did so , so it was not unheard of. Many of those Johnsons ended up on Iwo in the hands of Paramarines who were then in the 5th Marines ( as he was ) . After WW2 was over , the Johnson had been obsolete in service for a while , so it was no big deal to take one home ( unlike full autos or current issue M1911s or Garands ) and the break-down feature would have made sea-bag stuffing easy . It would not be unthinkable for his men to do this for him. Although the actual tapes were not available for us to hear , it is alluded to , in the article , that he , himself , said it was his rifle . If I was forced to sell a family heirloom , I would like it to go to someone who loved it too and would give it a good home , as long as I recieved a fair price. Chris
  23. Johnsons saw lots of action on Gavutu , Tanambogo , Guadalcanal ( where my Marine Raider freind first saw one ) , and Choiseul before Bougainville. Chris
  24. That is wierd. The trigger releases the hammer which strikes the firing pin which hits the primer . When you squeeze the triger , do you hear the hammer fall ? Chris
  25. I directed Heckinohio from the 1919A4.com site here to see if you had any bipods left . He joined , but he still can't get on and post . You can reach him here : http://1919a4.com/showthread.php?48797-Looking-for-Johnson-enthusiasts-group-from-Louisville-show-or