![m39 stock crack top m39 stock crack top](https://gun.deals/sites/default/files/239bbb8e1283f362c0552daf0f0e527a_0.jpg)
To paraphrase Muhammed Ali, "No M39 ever called me Hillbilly" so I will not hold the weapon responsible for your derogatory use of the word and I will pm you if I find one.Right now, somewhere in these United States, there is an M39 stock that is dying to be put back on to an M39 action.Let's see if we can use a little INGO "gunharmony" to make that happen. Postwar stock (squared finger-joints) shows considerable marks from handling and storage but has no cracks. Minor pitting on the charging handle and bolt. A Finnish M39 falls into that catagory.If you are patient I am sure you will find a correct stock.I get items like that through my shop all of the time and if you are willing to be patient I will do everything in my power to see that you get a proper stock for your M39.I have helped many an INGOer restore their weapon to it's proper configuration and will do so for you as well. Stock has several dings and minor cracks.
#M39 STOCK CRACK TOP DRIVERS#
Bottom line, you can buy one of these by faxing a copy of your drivers license. wasnt a real consideration, the quality was. The guns were assembled in the 1940s and later from the best recievers they had. The other one doesnt have a date stamp but bears the marking of one of the german companies that built new barrels for the Civil Guard. The rifle that is in the best condition is the M39. There where roughly 80,000 M39's manufactured.That is not very many rifles in the realm of WW2 guns.(Just to give you an example there where Six Million M1 Carbines made for the War.) Many people care as much about what a weapon has done and where it has been in it's lifetime as what it can do for them now. But with a Finn M39, this matters not a whit. Both have multiple cracks, and one looks like it has been Bondod back together. Hillbilly? We actually prefer the term "Appalachian American".