My transferrable Smith Enterprises M14....I find it to be fairly controllable actually, but I'm a wookie.
I'm going to put a GI synthetic on it, it's wearing a GI birch stock now, and while pretty, it heats up very quickly.
My transferrable Smith Enterprises M14....I find it to be fairly controllable actually, but I'm a wookie.
I'm going to put a GI synthetic on it, it's wearing a GI birch stock now, and while pretty, it heats up very quickly.
Employee of colonialshooting.com
308 4ME, heh? Tell us what you really think...
Congrats on the M14... looks like a very nice rifle. Are they like M16's with a HUGE $$$ tag?
Your new work must be good for you...
Rmpl
A non original gun, like a Springfield Armory Inc. or a Smith Enterprises, is about half what a real, unmolested M14 runs.
You're looking at slightly less than a quality registered M16.
Employee of colonialshooting.com
Nice M14 Sir, very nice!
TANT QUE JE PUIS
That birch looks crazy beautiful in the second picture.
The condition of that entire rifle is amazing!
Nice Score...
Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball...
Wow. That is aboslutly amazing. Thanks for sharing.
I know next to nothing about M14s, is that chambered in 308 or 30'06? It looks like a M1 Garand with a box magazine. Is that accurate or an I way off?
Originally Posted by Cybin
Nope, pretty accurate....the M14 was a product improved Garand, it was the rifle that introduced the .308 Win (7.62x51mm NATO) in 1957. It uses a separate gas piston and oprod, vs. the one piece piston/op rod arrangement of the M1 Garand.
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