You have a lot of good videos, but this is hands down, one of if not the best... kudos. You should be proud of this one, and it deserves to go viral. You should ask Demolition Ranch and Brandon Herrera if either of them would be interested in sharing it out on their socials for you... they might do it, and you'd get several million views, and probably a shitload of new subscribers.
Ex -Army here -Just the fact that that old war horse spent 80 years underwater, and basically came up SHOOTING, speaks a lot about it's genius design. I miss the old timers...
@@Kalossabrakstein 10+ years of engineering, machining, chemical and metal work experience. And 4 years of gunsmithing experience. I make any gun look like this in 2-3 days time. Honestly I woudl really appreciate that people stop destroying things so they can 'restore' them on YT for profit.
I was trained on using the M-1 Garand when I served in the US Navy Sea Bees in the late 50s. I will never forget something that happened during one of the training sessions. We were in a large room and being taught to take down and clean the M-1. As each piece was being taken down, the instructor would explain methods and functions. He was talking about taking the front section apart and I remember something like, "what ever you do, do not take the" and there was a loud TWANG behind me. Of course everyone turned around to see what made the noise, and this long spring was stuck in a ceiling tile hanging down and sort of still dancing around a bit. I cannot remember the fellow who did that but it was one of the more humorous times that come to mind when viewing a video such as yours.
Was that in boot camp or a school i assume a school but i whent in the 80's and things had changed alot from when you were in, i assume that would have been the 50's or 60's
@@mikebeddingfield2144 I went through basic at Great Lakes in July/September 1958, I don't think it was there. It may have been AIT at Port Hueneme California or even later on Okinawa, I just cannot remember except for that spring in the ceiling.
Nice rebuild on the M1 Garand. My dad was in WWII and was MIA for 2 days. They found him wit part of his chest blown away from a tank mortar. He was at the Battle of The Rapido River where over 1800 were injured, killed, or taken prisoner. Thanks for the video.
Hey as a Garand owner I say you did a good job at getting that piece of history restored at the very least it can be a display piece I’m honestly surprised you even tried to fire it, I would have been too scared
The fact that you actually test fired it is a testament to your skills. The fact that it jammed is directly related to the fact that you used as many original parts as possible and unfortunately, some were beyond serviceable. Great work on the stock, you did the best you could to restore the wood to its original luster. Thanks for sharing.
I restored a Springfield M1 Garand that went underwater in Hurricane Katrina. Other than the butt plate, the main spring, and the sling mounts, the rest of the rifle was perfect. The parkerizing kept the rest of the rifle as new and it still shot out to 1000' on a 36" gong.
Nice job, but I'm amazed that it didn't disintegrate taking it apart. I'm even more amazed that it survived a test fire, considering the depth of the pits and scaling. I'm also amazed you got the go the cartridge case out, seeing as it was literally fire-formed to the bore. Gotta say it again: it's an amazing project.
Excellent restoration! This looked like a tough one. The mechanics of firearms are absolutely fascinating to me. Seeing every little piece fit together, assemble so neatly, and work in complete harmony is amazing and so satisfying to watch.
Hello all of you I hope you really enjoy this video, I know it is long but well worth the watch. The next project is another really iconic firearm from All of our childhoods. Anyway thanks for all the support, please go give us a follow on our facebook page "the kinzler bros"
Nicely done! A true shame such a icon of WWII was treated so badly. Not surprised it failed to cycle with all that pitting on the machined surfaces. It obviously affected the chamber walls too which caused the casing to “grab” the pitting when it stretched. 😊
Not even close Adam coward and Jake have found over 50 and many other have found over 100 they just don’t restore them because it is not easy and takes alot of time and effort. But this was a great watch and restoration. Cheers guys keep it up
Its not unrealistic to find a lot of firearms in bodies of water. The reason being, thats the best way to dispose of a stolen firearm after the thief realizes that pawn shops keep a copy of the ID of every person they buy an item from.
Completely fabricated...They just happened to run across this one that was really found magnet fishing...The majority of these are left soaking in water, then allowed to rust enough to look like it wasn't on purpose for the video...
Truly a privilege watching you … the reverence and respect in your restorations … bringing these legendary weapons back to life … is appreciated … thanks for sharing … 🙏🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
I was sad to see it at first, having handled a few in my time. But your work on this artifact was above and beyond, as they say. Also, you've really upgraded your equipment since the beginning.
It looks like you are investing in some nice equipment and tools, good for you they always make the job easier. Also another great restoration, I've watched all your videos and have watched you progress in your talent.
Hands down one of my favorite firearms ever made! Such a beautiful rifle!! Had the opportunity to shoot one years ago and have wanted one ever since!! Your work is so satisfying to watch especially on a firearm used by the US Military.
First off, good job! Second, I did a little digging on some of the “pull numbers”, and it looks like you have a Frankenstein m1 garand (which there isn’t anything wrong with that). It just helps explain the story. An example of this, is the trigger housing being made by Springfield (528290-SA Type 13, which was in production from January/1955 to December/1957). I can’t read the serial for the receiver, but I’m thinking this might be a post Korea war m1. Besides the trigger housing, the rear sight is the T105E1 version. The DRC markings are made by a company called “Druge Brothers Manufacturing Co”, which were common on the Springfield Garands. WW2 rear sights had a “lock bar”, which this one does not. What I’m thinking, after the Korea war, these M1 Garands were collected, and eventually placed on the DMC program (which is pretty much like the CMP civilian marksmen program today). Before these rifles are placed on the market, the program would rebuild these m1 Garands if there were any parts that were too warn or broken. I’m thinking this M1 was marked as a field grade, meaning they fixed it to make it usable. There are different grading, but this particular one probably sold between 450 to 700 USD bucks back then. No other country had a program like this. It was very common to mix match brands within the program.. I’m thinking this rifle was obtained there. When these M1 first appeared in the DMC program, not many were sold. It didn’t start picking up until the mid 70s. How it was found in a river I’m thinking this was in the water for five-ish years, definitely not a decade. Anymore, the water would have completely eaten the metal and wood stock. It would be cool if you can provide other numbers from the m1 Garand. Then I can provide more info on the parts. The only “serial number” is on the receiver. Any other numbers on any of the parts, are draw numbers, which tells you who made the, where, and what timeframe they were in production. 😊 Also, is there a “P” on the pistol grip of the stock? That will tell you if the stock is original. It’s an inspection stamp.
It's a Winchester then ot was made during WWII when they had the contract. As to cost in the 80s they weren't cheap on the civilian ma4ket, not until surplus titles cqme 8n from Aouth Korea. Mine was 289 in 1989. dcm/cmp rifles were even cheaper. I believe 180 from the 1970s well into the 80s. But you were only allowed to purchase one rifle in your lifetime. I know the price was 310 in 1997 qnd 400 in 1998 and 500 8n June 2000.. Since then thy went to 750 for a rack grade through 1300+ for specials. The civilian marksmanship program is still selling rifles and currently has US surplus m2 ball in stock. For the price 9f a rack grade you could do worse?
I am Glad to see someone who really restores guns the right way as Backyard Ballistics does on his channel. I commend you on your video and its instructional information for any who wish to restore a firearm. Thanks for a Great video LL
Amazing restoration. 👏 When you first broke it down I thought a nice wall hanger. I did not think you would be able to fire it. General Payton said about the M-1 something along the lines of, the greatest war rifle/implant ever made. Respect sent to you for saving this piece of history.
@@TheKinzlerBros I work in a place with a lot of weapons. We have a number of armorers and one Gunsmith. He is a former Marine. He has been building and repairing weapons a long time. He has built sniper rifles for the Marines and for completion shooters at Camp Perry. And many more things. I shared your video to him.
This was a pretty good video. Most people would not try what you accomplished. As a Garand owner for many moons, I would like to suggest that you NEVER fire it again. If you do--PLEASE replace the safety lever, as the installed one is lacking the small "hook" at the top that grabs the hammer and prevents it falling. IT WILL NOT WORK AS A SAFETY. Also, you have severe chamber pitting which causes the firing case to expand to fill the void. That's why it did not extract. This is the BEST restoration I have seen tonight, as the other three were butcher jobs, so I will subscribe. BE CAREFUL, please.
I was in the US Army Infantry from1958-1964 I carried that weapon for about 3 years before it was replaced with the M14 in my outfit in 1961 I also carried the BAR and the 30 cal light machine gun till it was replaced by the M60 Machine gun. But that steel butt plate sure made a lot of bruises on my shoulder. The M1 Garand was awful heavy 9.5 lbs and the Bar 19.5 lb empty. You did a fantastic job or restoring it.
@@TheKinzlerBros Personally I never liked the M1 Garand it was heavy and held only 8 rounds when it got cold the operating handle had a hard time coming back because of the slide bar not having a wheel like the M14 did a many times I had to catch the operating handle on a tree to get it to open and I often poured oil down the barrel to get it to operate properly and if it got dirty from firing the cartridge broke off at the back and had to be removed with an extractor. and that damn thing rusted fast as you cleaned it especially the butt plate. I used to have a joke and said when I get out of the Army. I was going to buy a M1 Garand and piss on it every day then give myself a 3 -day pass.
It was absolutely fantastic that you restored a lady of the past. It would have been more beneficial to leave it as you found it and put it on display in a gallery or museum.
Beautifully done...🔥🔥🔥...it's so impressive how you managed to this much restoration after so many parts were damaged...good job....keep up the good work🎉
It just makes me wonder why it was thrown in the river in the first place. May be a story behind it that you really don't want to know to much about. I love M-1s. Both of them.
@@greggrace967My hunch is hunters crossing the river and the boat overturned or it somehow fell out of the boat. There's a possibility it was stolen and tossed in I guess but if that was the case then the S/N would be on file. Fell in off a overturned boat unlikely as few guys would think about hiring a dive team to retrieve it.
Working on M1's myself, I would have thought this weapon would be one of the most unrestorable ones out there just because of the way its built and all that wood. That bolt slide can be really finicky. Awesome video.
Absolutely masterful work. There's something inspirational about seeing something that so many would call trash be restored back to the warrior it was. Seriously, I'm moved
I'm actually really impressed by how good a condition i9t was in after who knows how long underwater. Did you find any serial numbers that could give a clue as to when/where it was manufactured?
The gas port is probably plugged and the op rod is now out of spec since it was bead blasted. I would be very afraid of that bolt! Good move to do it remotely! Nice video.
First thing I noticed was a late model rear sight and stamped trigger guard, surprised it still contained an M10 cleaning rod. Will be interesting to see how it turns out. I have a 1944 myself.
Going off the serials on the trigger group, this was a post-1957 refurb. Being stateside, that meant it would have likely been in a National Guard Armory, which had M1's until the 70's.
Great work 👍 It has been a long time since I've had an M1 Garand in my hands. What a Rifle! I'm glad it was fished out of the river, and it was eventually brought to you for excellent restoration. Since the chamber is so pitted and so are other parts it's a very cool Wall Hanger....... AAARRGGG!!!! BLASPHEMY!!! I can hear the snarling of creatures and gnashing of their teeth!!! It's a fact, Gentleman. It's a great bloody pat on the back miracle it is "here"! Let the owner decide... Best option is fill bore from the chamber with Cerro Safe or plain lead, and also, drill through the gas piston ring and push a pin through, locking it all together and TIG it in place. Would not be an inglorious end..... I'd be proud to have it in a walnut and glass case, hanging on the wall with an M5 cutdown bayonet in similar condition, 1/2" stencil on a wood slat: " U.S. RIFLE, CAL. .30, M1".
That penatrating oil you use is great and you may know this but a 50/50 mix of transmission fluid and acetone works awesome to , you just need to shake it before you use it because the liquids separate.
As a Garand owner with a bit of rebuild experience, all I can say is IMPRESSIVE!!! It would be interesting to know if it would have cycled if the chamber on the barrel was not pitted causing the case to expand and the extraction failure. I'm sure head spacing was a way out of tolerance as well. Nice job.
Great video and excellent work. Just a side note, the garand requires a light coating of gun grease on the rails (should help it cycle better) and the expanding cartridges may be because the garand requires a lower pressure round (M2 ball) as opposed to the factory 30-06 rounds that you find on the shelf today.
and i think i know a way to make it work better you just need to fire it a few times using pb blast to smooth out the function and also i think the cartage expansion has to do with the gas chamber not removing the pressure@@TheKinzlerBros
Excellent work restoring a legend. Extracting will always be tough with a chamber deformed by pitting. A new barrel would fix that. There are also after market 2- and 5- round en-bloc clips should you be tempted to try one out in the future!
Everytime I watch this one I am spellbound! This weapon fought and preserved our freedom in two hemispheres! Tragically more of these weapons returned home than the heroes that carried them.
I know zero about guns or restoring them, but find your videos very interesting and relaxing. Please could you add more detail as to what products you are using and maybe why certain processes..so i can at least look them up..fascinating to learn about your skill set
Chamber tolerances and headspace from years of corrosion make this a dangerous rifle to fire, and the extraction issues were a certainty. that being said, it was a fascinating exercise! Thank you for a great video.
I don't recall who said it, but I think it was a general that said the m-1 Garand was one of the reasons we won ww ll. My dad carried one and liked the weapon much better than a Thompson sub machine gun. To each his own. Beautiful restoration
I love watching the process of these restorations, and the historical value of these pieces is what's important. Being an owner of one of these great rifles I just cringe at the sight of one in this condition. Thanks for the education of restoration.
Kudos on this and your other firearms restorations. I am amazed and surprised that you can restore the seemingly unrestorable. You have restored firearms I thought would make great conversation pieces, as wall hangers or paperweights. You are indeed the firearms restoration whisperer.
My dad always spoke with pride of the M1 Garand being a Korean vet my intention was to always get him one.but sadly he passed fairly young and being a kid I couldn’t afford one at any price, now I own many and every time I take one out it always reminds me of my dad.
So glad you test fired it at the end i was hoping so all the way through the video and you didn't disappoint me good job and good video just ashame the brass expanded.
SUPER JOB!!.....THE CONDITION OF THE BORE WAS OUTSTANDING. I agree with your observation of the metal processing during original manufacture of the rifles, and an owner of 5 garands and am very familiar with the history of its manufacture, I learned early that the Garand was a tool of war. It wasn't made for gun collectors to marvel at and treat it like a baby.the "first" Garand cost around $80,000 by the end of the war the cost had dropped to $120 +/-(the most expensive "part" of the rifle was its stock followed by receiver and barrel.) very nice video
It's me again from the M1911 videos. From my research on the piece you found. You have Winchester Rifle 2429019, made in late April of 1944. Some parts are mismatched like typical of the time. How it ended up in the Red River was mostly from the Red River Army Depot. They usually dump within the river to remove and make space with the depot, anything they can't get rid of. Not only weapons, but also ammo and high explosives too. This rifle was given unfair mistreatment and I'm glad you did it again. Also, watching u put back together this M1, I noticed the bolt didnt stay when you pulled the rod all the way back. This could've been the MAIN issue of failure to extract. Those dents are from gases staying to escape but not from the front but the rear. Powder got hardened from the gases and caused this to fail. This doesn't surprise me. Again, in the river. Good work man.
Hey, ya that is correct. It was found in the Red River in North Dakota though. Thanks for the info though it was interesting! It wouldn't extract because the barrel has too much erosion.. thanks for watching!
Our Honor Guard fires M1 Garands at veteran's funerals. This was fantastic seeing how much there is to the rifle. Curiously, we do not have any Winchesters. We have Springfield Armory, H&R Arms, and International Harvester rifles. They are a beautiful rifle, and fortunately ours have never been submerged. This finish of the wood on the stock still looks great.
You have a lot of good videos, but this is hands down, one of if not the best... kudos. You should be proud of this one, and it deserves to go viral. You should ask Demolition Ranch and Brandon Herrera if either of them would be interested in sharing it out on their socials for you... they might do it, and you'd get several million views, and probably a shitload of new subscribers.
Thank you very much we appreciate you. We definitely will. It would be awesome if you shared it as well, thanks for the support and for watching!
@@TheKinzlerBros 👍 I'm sharing it out to my gun friends now.
I'm impressed by how well you can restore these guns and how you reassemble them after you feild strip them
Finally a channel where even the wood doesn't have rust
J
From a U.S. ARMY veteran, my deepest respect and gratitude for what you did for that old war beast. Fantastic video.
Thank you very much for your service, it was my pleasure. Thanks for watching!
Ex -Army here -Just the fact that that old war horse spent 80 years underwater, and basically came up SHOOTING, speaks a lot about it's genius design. I miss the old timers...
You mean that he destroyed garand so he could make fake restoration of it? Yeah well done to him. 🤦♂️
Your deepest respect and gratitude...like how he left it underwater to begin with so he could make a video.
@@Kalossabrakstein 10+ years of engineering, machining, chemical and metal work experience. And 4 years of gunsmithing experience. I make any gun look like this in 2-3 days time. Honestly I woudl really appreciate that people stop destroying things so they can 'restore' them on YT for profit.
I was trained on using the M-1 Garand when I served in the US Navy Sea Bees in the late 50s. I will never forget something that happened during one of the training sessions. We were in a large room and being taught to take down and clean the M-1. As each piece was being taken down, the instructor would explain methods and functions. He was talking about taking the front section apart and I remember something like, "what ever you do, do not take the" and there was a loud TWANG behind me. Of course everyone turned around to see what made the noise, and this long spring was stuck in a ceiling tile hanging down and sort of still dancing around a bit. I cannot remember the fellow who did that but it was one of the more humorous times that come to mind when viewing a video such as yours.
Thank you very much for your service, thanks for the story I enjoyed it. Thanks for watching we appreciate it!
Was that in boot camp or a school i assume a school but i whent in the 80's and things had changed alot from when you were in, i assume that would have been the 50's or 60's
@@mikebeddingfield2144 I went through basic at Great Lakes in July/September 1958, I don't think it was there. It may have been AIT at Port Hueneme California or even later on Okinawa, I just cannot remember except for that spring in the ceiling.
TWANG.....
@@ypaulbrown Well reflecting on it, some 65 years ago, it may have been more of a TWAAK.
Nice rebuild on the M1 Garand. My dad was in WWII and was MIA for 2 days. They found him wit part of his chest blown away from a tank mortar. He was at the Battle of The Rapido River where over 1800 were injured, killed, or taken prisoner. Thanks for the video.
Thank you very much, they are nice guns!Well thank him for his service. Thanks for watching
Dad passed away in 1960 when I was 7 years.@@TheKinzlerBros
Wait he survived!? Reading that made it sound like he had a hole blown in his chest or something!
@@nexaentertainment2764I call horse shit
God bless you and your family … and for your Dads sacrifice … yours in appreciation … from Scotland … 🙏🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
I love seeing a craftsman at work and keeping his workspace clean
Thanks Michael and we pride ourselves on keeping it clean
I don't think there are too many people out there that could tackle this mess, and even fewer that would. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you very much we appreciate it. thanks for watching!
The M1 grand. A very iconic and reliable field rifle. You brought it back to its beautiful and we all appreciate it
Thank you very much we appreciate it! Thanks for watching!
Hey as a Garand owner I say you did a good job at getting that piece of history restored at the very least it can be a display piece I’m honestly surprised you even tried to fire it, I would have been too scared
Thank you very much, ya we were nervous! Thanks for watching!
Please dont be scared 😁😁😁
This made my heart smile. Thank you for restoring that magnificent, war winning rifle!
We are happy to hear it, thank you very much and thanks for watching!
The fact that you actually test fired it is a testament to your skills. The fact that it jammed is directly related to the fact that you used as many original parts as possible and unfortunately, some were beyond serviceable. Great work on the stock, you did the best you could to restore the wood to its original luster. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the kind words we appreciate it! Thanks for watching
I restored a Springfield M1 Garand that went underwater in Hurricane Katrina. Other than the butt plate, the main spring, and the sling mounts, the rest of the rifle was perfect. The parkerizing kept the rest of the rifle as new and it still shot out to 1000' on a 36" gong.
That's awesome and a long shot, thanks for watching
The disassembly was moving. 🥲 Nice restoration, as always. Congrats !
Thank you very much, thanks for watching!
Omg man, you deserve a round of applause for restoring that gun!! Best restorer of guns I’ve ever seen, great job man 👍👏😎
Thank you very much for the kind words, we appreciate your support!
You should watch better videos this shit is still pitted corroded and ugly this isn't a restoration but a light cleaning
Nice job, but I'm amazed that it didn't disintegrate taking it apart. I'm even more amazed that it survived a test fire, considering the depth of the pits and scaling. I'm also amazed you got the go the cartridge case out, seeing as it was literally fire-formed to the bore. Gotta say it again: it's an amazing project.
I surprised myself along the way, thanks for watching!
That M1 ping is such a defining sound you just know it’s an M1 with it, great guy on bring this rifle back to life.
Ya it is iconic, the sound is amazing! Thanks for watching
Excellent restoration! This looked like a tough one. The mechanics of firearms are absolutely fascinating to me. Seeing every little piece fit together, assemble so neatly, and work in complete harmony is amazing and so satisfying to watch.
Thank you very much we appreciate it! Thanks for watching!
Hello all of you I hope you really enjoy this video, I know it is long but well worth the watch. The next project is another really iconic firearm from All of our childhoods. Anyway thanks for all the support, please go give us a follow on our facebook page "the kinzler bros"
Nicely done!
A true shame such a icon of WWII was treated so badly.
Not surprised it failed to cycle with all that pitting on the machined surfaces. It obviously affected the chamber walls too which caused the casing to “grab” the pitting when it stretched. 😊
These guys must hold the world record for "finding" guns under water with a magnet.....truly unbelievable...no really.....unbelievable.
Not even close Adam coward and Jake have found over 50 and many other have found over 100 they just don’t restore them because it is not easy and takes alot of time and effort. But this was a great watch and restoration. Cheers guys keep it up
Thank you very much but, we don't get all these magnet fishing, thanks for watching!
Its not unrealistic to find a lot of firearms in bodies of water. The reason being, thats the best way to dispose of a stolen firearm after the thief realizes that pawn shops keep a copy of the ID of every person they buy an item from.
Completely fabricated...They just happened to run across this one that was really found magnet fishing...The majority of these are left soaking in water, then allowed to rust enough to look like it wasn't on purpose for the video...
i work in antique furniture restoration- always love seeing the wooden stocks brought back to life 👍
Very cool, ya it took a lot of work! Thanks for watching
Truly a privilege watching you … the reverence and respect in your restorations … bringing these legendary weapons back to life … is appreciated … thanks for sharing … 🙏🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
We appreciate your support and it is my pleasure!
That was by far the most satisfying restoration I have ever seen with a firearm! Congratulations!!
Thank you very much we appreciate you, thanks for watching!
This really is a beautiful piece. You treated it perfect, and could not ask for much more than that. Love your channel.
Thank you very much we appreciate you. Thanks for watching!
This is a disgrace to its former beauty. It should have been ceremoniously melted down!
I was sad to see it at first, having handled a few in my time. But your work on this artifact was above and beyond, as they say. Also, you've really upgraded your equipment since the beginning.
Thanks we appreciate it, ya the better we get the more equipment we acquire. Thanks for watching
It looks like you are investing in some nice equipment and tools, good for you they always make the job easier.
Also another great restoration, I've watched all your videos and have watched you progress in your talent.
Good job. Nice wall hanger. Where did you get the new parts from
Hands down one of my favorite firearms ever made! Such a beautiful rifle!! Had the opportunity to shoot one years ago and have wanted one ever since!! Your work is so satisfying to watch especially on a firearm used by the US Military.
Ya one of mine too, that's awesome! You'll get one eventually, thanks we appreciate it. Thanks for watching+
Thanks for restoring that piece of history.
My pleasure, thanks for watching!
First off, good job! Second, I did a little digging on some of the “pull numbers”, and it looks like you have a Frankenstein m1 garand (which there isn’t anything wrong with that). It just helps explain the story. An example of this, is the trigger housing being made by Springfield (528290-SA Type 13, which was in production from January/1955 to December/1957).
I can’t read the serial for the receiver, but I’m thinking this might be a post Korea war m1. Besides the trigger housing, the rear sight is the T105E1 version. The DRC markings are made by a company called “Druge Brothers Manufacturing Co”, which were common on the Springfield Garands. WW2 rear sights had a “lock bar”, which this one does not. What I’m thinking, after the Korea war, these M1 Garands were collected, and eventually placed on the DMC program (which is pretty much like the CMP civilian marksmen program today). Before these rifles are placed on the market, the program would rebuild these m1 Garands if there were any parts that were too warn or broken. I’m thinking this M1 was marked as a field grade, meaning they fixed it to make it usable. There are different grading, but this particular one probably sold between 450 to 700 USD bucks back then. No other country had a program like this. It was very common to mix match brands within the program.. I’m thinking this rifle was obtained there. When these M1 first appeared in the DMC program, not many were sold. It didn’t start picking up until the mid 70s. How it was found in a river I’m thinking this was in the water for five-ish years, definitely not a decade. Anymore, the water would have completely eaten the metal and wood stock.
It would be cool if you can provide other numbers from the m1 Garand. Then I can provide more info on the parts. The only “serial number” is on the receiver. Any other numbers on any of the parts, are draw numbers, which tells you who made the, where, and what timeframe they were in production. 😊 Also, is there a “P” on the pistol grip of the stock? That will tell you if the stock is original. It’s an inspection stamp.
Red River, not Red Sea.
Thank you very much for the info, we appreciate it! Thanks for watching!
@@Slithey7433 your right. Still the water would have eaten all the wood.
That's because this channel is full of bs and lies. They found this shit on eBay probably. Then did nothing to actually RESTORE any of the material.
It's a Winchester then ot was made during WWII when they had the contract.
As to cost in the 80s they weren't cheap on the civilian ma4ket, not until surplus titles cqme 8n from Aouth Korea. Mine was 289 in 1989.
dcm/cmp rifles were even cheaper. I believe 180 from the 1970s well into the 80s. But you were only allowed to purchase one rifle in your lifetime. I know the price was 310 in 1997 qnd 400 in 1998 and 500 8n June 2000..
Since then thy went to 750 for a rack grade through 1300+ for specials.
The civilian marksmanship program is still selling rifles and currently has US surplus m2 ball in stock.
For the price 9f a rack grade you could do worse?
I am Glad to see someone who really restores guns the right way as Backyard Ballistics does on his channel. I commend you on your video and its instructional information for any who wish to restore a firearm. Thanks for a Great video LL
Thank you very much, we appreciate the kind words. Thanks for watching!
You can watch this kid till the cows come home and never see a restoration
You can almost hear that gun sigh with relief like it’s getting a spa day
Haha, I love it! Thanks for watching
Thank you for preserving an iconic piece of history. The M1 certainly helped preserve western civilization.
No problem, thank you very much for watching!
Amazing restoration. 👏 When you first broke it down I thought a nice wall hanger. I did not think you would be able to fire it. General
Payton said about the M-1 something along the lines of, the greatest war rifle/implant ever made. Respect sent to you for saving this piece of history.
Thank you very much we appreciate it, ya I wasn't very optimistic it would shoot, got fortunate. Thanks for watching
@@TheKinzlerBros I work in a place with a lot of weapons. We have a number of armorers and one Gunsmith. He is a former Marine. He has been building and repairing weapons a long time. He has built sniper rifles for the Marines and for completion shooters at Camp
Perry. And many more things. I shared your video to him.
From an old Navy veteran that drilled and trained with the Garand, thank you.
Your welcome, thank you for your service! Thanks for watching!
This was a pretty good video. Most people would not try what you accomplished. As a Garand owner for many moons, I would like to suggest that you NEVER fire it again. If you do--PLEASE replace the safety lever, as the installed one is lacking the small "hook" at the top that grabs the hammer and prevents it falling. IT WILL NOT WORK AS A SAFETY. Also, you have severe chamber pitting which causes the firing case to expand to fill the void. That's why it did not extract. This is the BEST restoration I have seen tonight, as the other three were butcher jobs, so I will subscribe. BE CAREFUL, please.
Thank you very much we appreciate it, ya it was a one shot and hang on the wall gun! Thanks for watching!
thanks to you, i know this gun inside and out :)
Your welcome, thank you very much for watching we appreciate it!
I was in the US Army Infantry from1958-1964 I carried that weapon for about 3 years before it was replaced with the M14 in my outfit in 1961 I also carried the BAR and the 30 cal light machine gun till it was replaced by the M60 Machine gun. But that steel butt plate sure made a lot of bruises on my shoulder. The M1 Garand was awful heavy 9.5 lbs and the Bar 19.5 lb empty. You did a fantastic job or restoring it.
Thank you very much for your service and for the kind words. Thanks for watching!
@@TheKinzlerBros Personally I never liked the M1 Garand it was heavy and held only 8 rounds when it got cold the operating handle had a hard time coming back because of the slide bar not having a wheel like the M14 did a many times I had to catch the operating handle on a tree to get it to open and I often poured oil down the barrel to get it to operate properly and if it got dirty from firing the cartridge broke off at the back and had to be removed with an extractor. and that damn thing rusted fast as you cleaned it especially the butt plate. I used to have a joke and said when I get out of the Army. I was going to buy a M1 Garand and piss on it every day then give myself a 3 -day pass.
It was absolutely fantastic that you restored a lady of the past. It would have been more beneficial to leave it as you found it and put it on display in a gallery or museum.
Thanks, ya if it was found overseas in a river I would have but, it was found in ND. Thanks for watching
Beautifully done...🔥🔥🔥...it's so impressive how you managed to this much restoration after so many parts were damaged...good job....keep up the good work🎉
Thank you very much Abin, ya this one was hard, thanks for watching!
Great job on the restoration! Only thing I would point out is that these old Garands need a thicker grease for operation, not a lightweight oil.
Thanks we appreciate it, ya your right! Thanks for watching
To see such an iconic rifle thrown into a river makes me sad. Happy to see it getting restored! Such amazing work and craftsmanship!
Ya it's terrible, thank you very much we appreciate the kind words. Thanks for watching!
It just makes me wonder why it was thrown in the river in the first place. May be a story behind it that you really don't want to know to much about. I love M-1s. Both of them.
@@greggrace967My hunch is hunters crossing the river and the boat overturned or it somehow fell out of the boat.
There's a possibility it was stolen and tossed in I guess but if that was the case then the S/N would be on file.
Fell in off a overturned boat unlikely as few guys would think about hiring a dive team to retrieve it.
It's almost like the owner threw it in the river as a way of letting go of the past and the bitter memories of fighting in World War 2. Who knows.
I am satisfied that this is a genuine restoration
Thank you we appreciate you!
Working on M1's myself, I would have thought this weapon would be one of the most unrestorable ones out there just because of the way its built and all that wood. That bolt slide can be really finicky. Awesome video.
Thank you very much I appreciate it, thanks for watching
So question Justin Rhoads. How come the guy didn’t replace the wood? Wouldn’t have been so rotten that it would have broken apart super easy?
Too bad that happened to such a fine weapon. Thanks for trying to restore it.
Ya its terrible, thanks we appreciate it!
That poor Garand :( You did it a good service.
Right!, thanks we appreciate it!
I dislike restoration videos where the end result is an unusable thing. The fact that you got this fully restored to firing is amazing!
Ya we always try to shoot them, thanks we appreciate it! Thanks for watching
I’m glad you got it fire in again good job brother
Thank you, thanks for watching!
Brings back memories of 1961. Thanks.
Your welcome, thanks for watching!
Absolutely masterful work. There's something inspirational about seeing something that so many would call trash be restored back to the warrior it was. Seriously, I'm moved
Thank you very much I appreciate it. Thanks for watching
You obviously never handled a real one. This is a disgrace!
I'm actually really impressed by how good a condition i9t was in after who knows how long underwater. Did you find any serial numbers that could give a clue as to when/where it was manufactured?
Thank you very much we appreciate it, I came up with 1944. Thanks for watching!
The gas port is probably plugged and the op rod is now out of spec since it was bead blasted. I would be very afraid of that bolt! Good move to do it remotely! Nice video.
Ya exactly, we just wanted to shoot it once, thanks for watching
Nice decorator.I wouldn't try to shoot it.
You made the solider that carried that rifle smile 😊👍
Thank you very much for the kind words, thanks for watching
the way he easily fixes the gun with soothing sounds satisfies me
Thank you very much, I appreciate it!
First thing I noticed was a late model rear sight and stamped trigger guard, surprised it still contained an M10 cleaning rod. Will be interesting to see how it turns out. I have a 1944 myself.
Good eye, ya it's been through a lot! Thanks for watching and that is very cool they are iconic rifles!
Going off the serials on the trigger group, this was a post-1957 refurb. Being stateside, that meant it would have likely been in a National Guard Armory, which had M1's until the 70's.
Thanks for the info and for watching
Great work 👍 It has been a long time since I've had an M1 Garand in my hands. What a Rifle!
I'm glad it was fished out of the river, and it was eventually brought to you for excellent restoration.
Since the chamber is so pitted and so are other parts it's a very cool Wall Hanger.......
AAARRGGG!!!! BLASPHEMY!!! I can hear the snarling of creatures and gnashing of their teeth!!!
It's a fact, Gentleman. It's a great bloody pat on the back miracle it is "here"!
Let the owner decide... Best option is fill bore from the chamber with Cerro Safe or plain lead, and also, drill through the gas piston ring and push a pin through, locking it all together and TIG it in place.
Would not be an inglorious end.....
I'd be proud to have it in a walnut and glass case, hanging on the wall with an M5 cutdown bayonet in similar condition, 1/2" stencil on a wood slat: " U.S. RIFLE, CAL. .30, M1".
Thanks I appreciate it, ya I was happy it shot once. Thanks for the comments and for watching
30-06 is one hell of a round! I must say that the M1 Garand won the war indeed..
That penatrating oil you use is great and you may know this but a 50/50 mix of transmission fluid and acetone works awesome to , you just need to shake it before you use it because the liquids separate.
Yes it is, thanks for the tip and for watching we appreciate it!
@TheKinzlerBros great content , just found this channel and I think I'll hang around here 😀.
As a Garand owner with a bit of rebuild experience, all I can say is IMPRESSIVE!!! It would be interesting to know if it would have cycled if the chamber on the barrel was not pitted causing the case to expand and the extraction failure. I'm sure head spacing was a way out of tolerance as well. Nice job.
Ya it was in rough shape, thank you very much we appreciate it! It might have it's hard to say. Thanks for watching!
Great video and excellent work. Just a side note, the garand requires a light coating of gun grease on the rails (should help it cycle better) and the expanding cartridges may be because the garand requires a lower pressure round (M2 ball) as opposed to the factory 30-06 rounds that you find on the shelf today.
Thank you, we appreciate the advice. We used m1 garand ammo in it. Thanks for watching!
I think enough of the metal had rusted away, or been pitted deep enough that the chamber was a larger bore which allowed the casing to expand.
so basically you turned it into a musket from the 17 hundreds
Ya it was the best I could do. Thanks for watching
but also do you still have it or did you give it away to charity or somthing
and i think i know a way to make it work better you just need to fire it a few times using pb blast to smooth out the function and also i think the cartage expansion has to do with the gas chamber not removing the pressure@@TheKinzlerBros
Even worse...It now belongs in the scrap metal bucket...
so no ping?
Couldn't get it to cycle, thanks for watching
I have several Garands and I'm impressed you could even get this rifle apart let alone go as far as you did with restoration. Nice work.
That's cool, ya it was a big challenge! Thanks for watching
You brought it back as good as an 80 year old drowned rifle could come back. Great job.
We appreciate it, it was a tough one!
Geez, if that old thing could speak....
It would be an amazing story!
bro is is incredable to restore this rutten 80 years old gun and make it shot.....you got my respect bro
Thank you very much we appreciate it, thanks for watching!
@@TheKinzlerBros Np bro i am here for more restoreded gun xD
Watching ur videos is my stress reliever..
Thanks, we are glad it helps!
When you showed that it is a Winchester my heart sank. Thanks for fixing this old gun up.
Ya I hear you, thanks for watching we appreciate it!
Thanks. I am recovering from a stroke. ( i lived!) watching the process is encouraging!
Your welcome, I hope your recovery is a speedy one. Glad you enjoyed it and thanks for watching!
Excellent work restoring a legend. Extracting will always be tough with a chamber deformed by pitting. A new barrel would fix that. There are also after market 2- and 5- round en-bloc clips should you be tempted to try one out in the future!
Thanks we appreciate it, ya for sure. It's just a wall hanger now, thanks for watching
Good
Thanks!
Everytime I watch this one I am spellbound! This weapon fought and preserved our freedom in two hemispheres! Tragically more of these weapons returned home than the heroes that carried them.
Ya it's crazy, ya a lot of good people died in those wars
I love the skill and passion you put into this, but I would not try shooting it
Thank you very much, ya we don't plan on shooting it anymore. Thanks for watching!
Muy buen trabajo, muchas felicitaciones 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thank you very much!
I know zero about guns or restoring them, but find your videos very interesting and relaxing. Please could you add more detail as to what products you are using and maybe why certain processes..so i can at least look them up..fascinating to learn about your skill set
I will do my best! Thank you very much we appreciate it! Thanks for watching
Chamber tolerances and headspace from years of corrosion make this a dangerous rifle to fire, and the extraction issues were a certainty. that being said, it was a fascinating exercise! Thank you for a great video.
Ya absolutely, we were nervous about shooting it! Thanks we appreciate it, thanks for watching!
The personality shines through and keeps viewers coming back.
Thank you for the kind words we appreciate it! Thanks for watching
I don't recall who said it, but I think it was a general that said the m-1 Garand was one of the reasons we won ww ll. My dad carried one and liked the weapon much better than a Thompson sub machine gun. To each his own. Beautiful restoration
It absolutely was, the Thompson was definitely heavier! Thanks for watching
The restoration of the stock itself is amazing
Thanks Michael!
If the Black Pearl from Pirates of the Caribbean were turned into a M1 Garand, haha love it. Great job!
Haha nice, thanks for watching we appreciate it!
This video deserves just this one word: *Amazing!*
Thank you very much we appreciate it!
Ti ringrazio per il video molto ben fatto e istruttivo. Onore e rispetto per il sacrificio dei soldati americani, liberatori dell’Europa. 😢
Thank you very much, we appreciate the support. Thanks for watching!
I love watching the process of these restorations, and the historical value of these pieces is what's important. Being an owner of one of these great rifles I just cringe at the sight of one in this condition. Thanks for the education of restoration.
Thanks we appreciate it, thanks for watching!
Kudos on this and your other firearms restorations. I am amazed and surprised that you can restore the seemingly unrestorable. You have restored firearms I thought would make great conversation pieces, as wall hangers or paperweights. You are indeed the firearms restoration whisperer.
Thank you for all the kind words we appreciate you! Thanks for watching
My dad always spoke with pride of the M1 Garand being a Korean vet my intention was to always get him one.but sadly he passed fairly young and being a kid I couldn’t afford one at any price, now I own many and every time I take one out it always reminds me of my dad.
Well I wish I could thank your dad for his service, your story is very touching. Thanks for watching we appreciate it!
Kudos to you for all this work and test firing it but maybe that one should remain a display piece. I love my M1. Good job.
Thanks, ya it's retired now! Ya they were ahead of their time. Thanks for watching!
amazing! Incredible work , and saving the old girl ,much respect
Thank you for the kind words and for watching we appreciate it!
Great restoration on a great old gun. Wish it tell us the story
Thanks, ya me too, thanks for watching
So glad you test fired it at the end i was hoping so all the way through the video and you didn't disappoint me good job and good video just ashame the brass expanded.
Ya we were nervous, happy it didn't blow up but, bummed it didn't cycle! Thanks and thanks for watching!
Very interesting watching the rebirth of one of the rifles ever produced in America!
Yes it is, Thank you we appreciate it, thanks for watching!
Well done to save an old warrior 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️✅✅✅✅✅🫵🏼
Thank you, thanks for watching!
That rifle is a hero of the USA, thank you for doing such a great job of returning it to it's glory.
Absolutely, it was my pleasure! Thanks for watching
Fascinating video. Great restoration work. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you very much we appreciate it, thanks for watching
SUPER JOB!!.....THE CONDITION OF THE BORE WAS OUTSTANDING. I agree with your observation of the metal processing during original manufacture of the rifles, and an owner of 5 garands and am very familiar with the history of its manufacture, I learned early that the Garand was a tool of war. It wasn't made for gun collectors to marvel at and treat it like a baby.the "first" Garand cost around $80,000 by the end of the war the cost had dropped to $120 +/-(the most expensive "part" of the rifle was its stock followed by receiver and barrel.) very nice video
Thank you very much we appreciate it, thanks for the story and for watching!
It's me again from the M1911 videos. From my research on the piece you found. You have Winchester Rifle 2429019, made in late April of 1944. Some parts are mismatched like typical of the time. How it ended up in the Red River was mostly from the Red River Army Depot. They usually dump within the river to remove and make space with the depot, anything they can't get rid of. Not only weapons, but also ammo and high explosives too. This rifle was given unfair mistreatment and I'm glad you did it again. Also, watching u put back together this M1, I noticed the bolt didnt stay when you pulled the rod all the way back. This could've been the MAIN issue of failure to extract. Those dents are from gases staying to escape but not from the front but the rear. Powder got hardened from the gases and caused this to fail. This doesn't surprise me. Again, in the river. Good work man.
Hey, ya that is correct. It was found in the Red River in North Dakota though. Thanks for the info though it was interesting! It wouldn't extract because the barrel has too much erosion.. thanks for watching!
Ive been using kroil since 1971. Good stuff.
Yes it is, thanks for watching
That was quite the find! All things considered a nice restoration of a grand old Garand !
Yes it is, thank you very much!
Thank you for the time and effort it took to bring this historic old firearm back to life.
Your welcome Howard, thank you for watching!
You guys are absolutely incredible! Thanks for the look. I'm sold; going to keep watching. God bless, Patrick
Thank you very much we appreciate the kind words, thanks for watching Patrick!
Our Honor Guard fires M1 Garands at veteran's funerals. This was fantastic seeing how much there is to the rifle. Curiously, we do not have any Winchesters. We have Springfield Armory, H&R Arms, and International Harvester rifles. They are a beautiful rifle, and fortunately ours have never been submerged. This finish of the wood on the stock still looks great.
Very cool we appreciate you, thanks for watching!
Taking a seemingly irreparable treasure and breathing new life into it...#respect. Amazing work and great video!
Thanks we appreciate the kind words, thanks for watching!
lovely mixture of finesse and just hitting it with a hammer
Ya it was in rough shape, thanks for watching!
ive had alot of M1 garands that needed help. but this one even though you did a great job is beyond being servicible. great video though
Ya it has too much erosion, thank you and thanks for watching!
Excellently done! Thorough and methodical meticulous as well.
Thanks we appreciate it!