Hi... I'm new to M1 Carbines and I just bought an Iver Johnson (70's or 80's?) and I have a few questions for you m1 carbine pros. I haven't fired or disassmebled opened the gun at all, I'm just inspecting it. I have NO MAGAZINE for it.
1. The bolt is hard to cock it with the slide lever. The first half inch of pulling the lever seems to "lock up" or "catch" on something... unless I pull really fast or really hard (10 or 15lbs). Once it's cocked it's easy to work back and forth. I Pop the trigger and once again the bolt is sticky. I can operate the bolt real hard or fast and it works again.
2. if you look down the sights, the right side of the handguard is a bit higher than the left side. This model has a ventilated metal handguard. It's so high it obscures the sight picture of the some of the right sight hood. I see that the slide rod is under that right side, so maybe its higher on purpose?
3. the gun is just fairly shaky and noisy all around. The whole trigger assembly shake, barrel, and bolt have a little bit of play when pushed. This is not a sneaky gun!
This is a post war commercial manufactured gun and I know these guns have some very loose tolerances. But I'm pretty darn concerned. Any ideas?
1. The bolt is hard to cock it with the slide lever. The first half inch of pulling the lever seems to "lock up" or "catch" on something... unless I pull really fast or really hard (10 or 15lbs). Once it's cocked it's easy to work back and forth. I Pop the trigger and once again the bolt is sticky. I can operate the bolt real hard or fast and it works again.
2. if you look down the sights, the right side of the handguard is a bit higher than the left side. This model has a ventilated metal handguard. It's so high it obscures the sight picture of the some of the right sight hood. I see that the slide rod is under that right side, so maybe its higher on purpose?
3. the gun is just fairly shaky and noisy all around. The whole trigger assembly shake, barrel, and bolt have a little bit of play when pushed. This is not a sneaky gun!
This is a post war commercial manufactured gun and I know these guns have some very loose tolerances. But I'm pretty darn concerned. Any ideas?