

Not a 1990 product.Ġ00001 to 063XXX Receivers machined by Valley Ordnance Co. However the good news is that you r serial number puts your gun in the golden age of M1A production. All of the M1A/M14 after 1970 i think were commercial production. But the serial number range you show would still put it out of the military contract and service time frame. CDCM did indeed sell some of the military rifles after they went through a welding process to disable the select fire. That does't mean that there was not a government contract gun in that range of an earlier production. My reference puts the 005xxxx serial number range in 1990 now that is what would be considered current production Springfields. I know we have a bunch of folks on here that deal with mil surp rifles. I got on another forum, and they were quick to say in their rules "No asking prices/worth". The scope fogged one time, so I took it off. It also has a B-Square mount, and a Bushnell scope on it. It has a TRW bolt, and I don't see any other markings, but I don't really know where to look, and I didn't want to start tearing it apart. Again, from what I have read, I think this might have been one of the early conversions for the sniper program in Vietnam.
Springfield m1a serial number search full#
You can see the filler on the stock from the full auto conversion. All of the sights have National Match stamped on them. From what I have read, it is the "Big Red" stock. All the cartouches, Circle P under grip, Eagle and Stars on side of stock. Month worth of part time teaching (poof) gone in a 5 minute conversation. So I was on a tear of wanting an M1A/M14 rifle, and while I was browsing on the internet, waiting on a flight at AirCare, one of the pilots said "I have one of those".
