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22,000 carbines + 86,000 rifles = 108,000 firearms in the new shipment.A total of 86,000 M1 rifles and another 22,000 carbines will be sold, according to the ministry, which estimates their expected sale price at $220 and more than $140, respectively.
South Korea earned more than $20 million from the first shipment.
I'm keen on military history myself. I turned it into a hobby of sorts by collecting all the USAAF cloth escape & evasion maps during that time period.AndyC wrote:Yeah, I doubt that will be retail price either, but I'm really keen to keep an eye on this. I've always wanted a Garand (long before Saving Private Bryan or whatever came out) - I'm a big WW2 nut, probably because one of my grandfathers was lost while on minesweeper-duty in the English Channel.
http://www.thecmp.org/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;joe817 wrote:I'd like to have both the carbine(again) & the M1, just for old times sake.
I bought a Springfield 03-A4 (never issued) for about that same amount from the DCM back in the early 60's. It was delivered via Railway Express. BOY HOWDY, etc! I sure wish I'd been smart enough to keep it.joe817 wrote:
I had for a long time a .30 cal. carbine I got from DCM from the NRA back in the 60's. Paid $17.00 for it.
Yes! When I learned the NRA had the DCM program that offered an $11.00 1911, that's when I joined up, and tried to order one, but by that time they had sold out of them(or had discontinued offering it). So I settled on the carbine.IIRC, one could get a 1911 for about $11.00 from the DCM back then?
You have to buy 10s of 1000s to get that price. And win the contract.dolomiti wrote:$220?!?! I'll take 10 please.