Got my 03A3 as a barreled action some 55 years ago, before the Dodd Anti-gun Act of 1968. The magazine well is from an 03 (milled, not stamped). I put a Fajan stock on it. Its favorite MILSURP ammo is M2AP. The range I used had a hillside 1/4 mile thick, so penetration was not an issue. If I do my part, you could cover a 3 shot group with a dime at 100 yards. I like aperture rear sights. I learned that in the Army on an M1 Garand. That was why I fell in love with the .30-06 cartridge.
Thanks for taking the time to make and share. My first 30 caliber rifle I bought at 16 was a M1903A3 and I promptly put it to work killing groundhogs. Yes, you can actually kill a groundhog with a 30-06. Repeat shots never needed. Nice rifle and I still have it over 40 years later.
This is the second of your videos I've watched I like that you keep it moving quickly. A note on the mag cut off switch, it was also used when a soldier might want to load a armor-piercing, tracer or Incendiary round to mark a target at night time. One of the reasons I favor the 30.06 is the multitude of various ammunition available, one can shoot prairie dogs with 110 grains in the afternoon and kill deer at dusk with a 220 grain soft point. Also the 30.06 round is pretty much flat out to 150 yards that's why the low end of those sights you mentioned were at 200 yards. Believe it or not during early Vietnam some 1903A3s were used as sniper rifles. Keep it up, you do a good job here.
Harder to come by in Australia but they are around. They command a premium over the Enfield because of this but are worth the spend for sure. And 30-06 is probably the best all around calibre ever made. Great review 🇦🇺👍🏻
@ Australian Made - "And 30-06 is probably the best all around calibre ever made. Great review" Firearms trainer and author Kenneth Royce, better known in the firearms community as "Boston" of "Boston's Gun Bible" fame, put it best, saying of the 30-06 that it was a "home-run" and the most influential cartridge of the 20th century. He'd probably get some argument there, since there are other contenders - British 303, 7.92x57/8mm Mauser, 7.62x54R, etc. - but it is hard to argue with its popularity, versatility or longevity. It remains the most-popular center-fire cartridge in the world, and for good reason. It can handle an astonishingly wide range of bullet types and weights, ranging from 80 to 220 grains, and can do everything from varmint-hunting to the taking of giant bears, as well as its storied military and competition histories. And handloaders using modern propellants and high-BC bullets can squeeze 300 near-Win-Mag performance out of it when it comes to LR shooting. There are specific cartridges and loads that surpass the venerable '06 in certain ways, but it is difficult to think of a single cartridge which does so many things as well. King and still champion after more than a century.
I had a sporterized Springfield 03-A3 with a full float barrel and peep sight. With this rifle I learned how to shoot high power. I can remember shooting an 8 shot 6" group while standing with a GI sling at 150 yds. I'm not the greatest shot but this rifle has given me a lot of great memories! Thanks for a great review!
I've got a Remington 1903a3 I picked up a year or two ago and it's one of my favorites. I had an older 1903 about 20 years ago that I had sold when I was in a financial pinch and had been wanting another for a while. Finally found one I liked for a price I was willing to pay and picked up an A3 this time. I have to say that I like the aperture rear sight much better than the blade style that my older model had. For me it was easier to put on target. Probably because I also spent a lot of time shooting my Garand and M1 Carbines. To me it is the best of the Mauser style bolt action war rifles. I have an early WWII K98k and I prefer my 1903a3.
@@KIMO365 There are plenty on Gunbroker. They aren't going to get any cheaper so best time to get one is now. Unless you moved to a place that prohibits firearms ownership.
@@davegeisler7802 The great thing about the mauser style action is that there are MANY to pick from used by most of Europe, and central and south America as well. I've since picked up a Brazilian 08/35 in .30-06 and it is amazing.
Just picked up a 03a3 Remington drill receiver last summer, got a NOS 2 grove Remington barrel that was only a month newer than the receiver, I have all the mechanical parts assembled and checked out, now i need the stock and hardware to finish it.
Good vid. I recently found an SA M1903A1 with a good sn. It was made in 1918 and refurbed in 1942. Had to have it! Even as a kid I loved these rifles and could spot them in war movies & documentaries. At 64 my eyes ain’t what they used to be so getting used those sights was a real bear. Still managed to keep everything in the 8 ring at 100 yds. The Springfield is a work of art.
A family member of mine had one when I was a kid. It had an old Unertl or Fecker scope on it and I could barely lift it. Same family member shot CMP matches with it before the scope was put on and he free free floated the barrel but you could not tell by looking at it. He had 2 barrels for it. It was an A3. Don't know that I have ever seen a stripper clip for one though.
11:24 It has officially been OVER 100 years, I believe if the reciver was going to blow it would have during WW2. I have my great grandpas 1903 cerial No 287,XXX. Ended WW1, fought WW2 and opened camp Pendleton with him. I've shot this rifle myself many times. Given there are always exceptions and I'm sure one of these days another will blow and it will make th news, but is the low cerial gets to you, leave it for me Edit: typo
Same year I bought my Remington 1903A3. I was a senior in high school, and I bought it at a local shopping mall in Los Angeles county. They put a long, skinny plastic bag over it and I walked right through the mall and out into the parking lot with nary a sideways glance from the public (try THAT today in LA, lol!) I never had a bit of trouble until trying to smuggle it in the house past my mom... that didn't go quite as well, since Mom knew a BB gun from a battle rifle.
@@KIMO365 kim... They make different heights of front sight blades... Look around at the next gun show. There's usually a vendor or two that specializes in U.S. military parts. Should put you back on target in no time.
Good video, easy to understand. I agree that the original 1903 was a cooler looking rifle but the '03-A3 was easier to use because of the increased sight radius. Both of these old beauties could be purchased for rock bottom prices back in the 80's and 90's but the prices have edged up because many folks are hanging on to them more than they used to. Also, the CMP no longer has any of the 1903's to sell as surplus so it's now your best luck at gun shows, Gunbroker, or local gun shops. One last note, if you have an original, PLEASE don't hack it up to make another deer rifle! Go buy a factory rifle and leave these ol' pieces of US military history alone!!! Thanks!
Hi Kimo, new subscriber here. I just picked up my 1903 A3 today. It's stamped U.S. Remington on top of the receiver and the rear sights were very loose on receipt. It was refurbished and I'm going to give it another thorough inspection and cleaning before I take it to the range to test fire. I collect vintage milsurp rifles and this is just the latest addition to my collection. I need to attach a sling, purchase some stripper clips and at some later date, find a bayonet (don't care if it's a reproduction) for it.
Thanks for the info on the stripper clips from Creedmore. I have been using old 7mm striper clipps made for the Mauser 1895 Chilean.I like the M1903 as a rifleman and yes the sights are complicated like you said.I shoot a lot of Mausers and Lee Enfields but you can beat the M1903 as a good target rifle even though it was a general issue infantry rifle.The M1903A3 is an excellent rifle for combat because of the peep sight which simplified training and guys using the M1 Garand will shoot just as good with it once they get used to the recoil.For the modern guy the peep sight would be more familiar if they shoot the M16/AR series using the battle sights.Plenty mahalos from Vegas Brah!!!Aloha!!!
Ive only recently become interested in these rifles. What i like about bolt action is theres no wasted energy like with an ar15. Takes a portion of gas to work ejector and reload. And ive noticed the mauser seems very well engineered.
Gas guns use otherwise lost energy. The amount of gas used is really small, and happens after the bullet is long gone from the barrel. A self loader is more efficient whatever the operating principle.
If I'm not mistaken, the rear safety lug should not be touching the back of the reciever correct? In mix and matched guns where it is locked against the receiver at the rear, I don't know if the main lugs are locked against the lugs in the reciever, or if they are slightly off, being held off by the safety lug, hence all pressure on the back of the receiver every time you shoot. When there is about a mm of space in between the safety lug and the reciever, if the main lugs fail, it will catch on the safety lug, also, you know for sure that the main lugs are locked. Is this true, I've heard this somewhere before.
To my notion, the Devil Dog Marines plinking of German sunbathers remains the gold standard for long range shooting. My father was on the North Georgia College honor guard for the funeral for retired professor, Dr. Gaillard. He dropped his ‘03 in the snow and ice. Thirty six years later I got my glove stuck in my M1 during NGC battalion drill competition in low 20s weather and high winds.
Best I have seen, so far. I had thought the M1903A was a Naval Rifle. I remember hearing about the "Mauser" design thefts. I found the Brit's Mk1#1 a much smoother action. (Yes, the wire wrap was removed from the SME Mk1#1, but the launcher sight was left in place.)
I'm sure someone has already noted these two things. One, the bolt is actually slightly different than a mauser. Mauser's have only the two front lugs and a different cocking mechanism. Two the magazine cut off was made for loading blanks to fire a rifle grenade.
I grew up shooting my father's A3 when they were for sale for $18.00 in the back of the NRA magazine. It now belongs to my son. Anyway, I was always told that the on/off switch was mainly for when you were in the heat of battle and your magazine was empty, you would know to refill and not just close the bolt, thinking you had a round chambered.
Great review! I own a Springfield 03 Mark 1 and I live in Springfield Mass where the Springfield Armory used to be. Armory is now a college and a U.S. National Historic Site with an incredible museum. Thanks for the video. Good stuff.
I have a Remington A3 dated on barrel as 42, from an old 1903 operations manual it state that the bolt cutoff selector is use for firing blanks when outfitted w/ a rifle grenade popular option back in it's day, that way in combat you still had live rounds ready to use. The rifle grenade adaptor disconnected from the barrel just like a bayonet from my understanding. The sights on the A3 were implemented as a transition type of sight because it was so similar to the M-1 Garand sites that were just coming into service starting 1939, the sight were to get the old troops up to speed on the new Garand type of sight, good video thanks.
Excellent comparison. I marched many a mile with the 03A3 years ago at Navy boot Great Lakes. Didn't much appreciate it much back then, fast forward to now after owning several of both......... I LOVE shooting my A3's, use scoped version as one of my goto deer rifles.
I just bought a national ordinance 1903 a3 from the consignment rack at a local shop, and whoever left it with them to sell it, (or perhaps the person they Inherited it from) had turned it into a custom sporter. The stock has a rubber cushion and a cheek well, and less excitingly, the sights have been completely changed and the rear sight now sits well infront of the action, and the front sight has a big ol hood over it. As I picked it up for approximately the cost of a hi point carbine, I really don't have any room to complain. I just hope the old adjustable rear sight can still be mounted, and I can find one that still works on ebay.
A guy needs one of each. Yeah, the heat treating (SCARE) thing is mostly baloney, these things held up just fine and many still dropping deer, elk and such today. They last forever.
Since it's a Mauser claw CRF, you still want to push the head of the round down into the magazine to protect the claw extractor when using the mag cutoff feature. It only prevents existing rounds in the mag from feeding due to position in the magazine. Regarding "trick drill team" use, hes, they do beat you up. Braking one in a spin really stings, but the 03-A3 (and by extension any M98 "cock on open" rifle) might be the best rifle for cool tricks you can do with the bolt, as in "Inspection Arms."
I was given my grandfathers 03 when I was a kid. I have the receipt for $18.00 he paid for it. He sporterized it way back. There was no internet when I got it and that magazine cutoff was blowing my mind. It makes sense now but I was hunting with it in OFF, and it wouldn't take another round. It was good at the range, but after I cleaned it and put the bolt back in I flipped it and when I went out I lost a follow up shot at an Elk. Dumb kid I was. I love the old thing. I refinished the stock, bedded it, parkerized it, and put a newer Burris scope on it. I have had trouble getting tight groups but it does OK.
The M1903 sights are definitely a challenge. But remember....along with quick reflexes a18-19 year old soldier’s eyesight is incredible as is the ability to hold the rifle steady. Also withIn the range of the battle sights....”V” notch ladder down, no computation was necessary.
Springfield M1903 rifles have acquired a reputation in some circles as a mere "copy" of the Mauser Brothers paradigm-changing bolt-action family of rifles, but the M1903 stands on its own - and deserves to do so - for a number of significant improvements its designers made over the Mauser. The trigger on the M1903 was superior to that on the Mauser, and easier to tune. The sights on the American design are excellent, really a technological marvel for their time. Although some users find them hard to use, they aren't too challenging once one knows the rifle and takes the time to understand the sights, which were designed with maximum flexibility in mind - offering a battle-sight zero notch for snap-shooting, and a choice of apertures on the ladder sights, which are graduated to 2,400 yards. Why such an extravagant distance? Because in those days (c. 1900), the infantryman's rifle was considered an area-denial weapon when fired in volley, i.e., simultaneous fire by a section of men upon a distant target. However, the M1903 was superbly accurate out to 1,000 yards against point targets, and there are numerous instances of effective and precise fire in combat at ranges out to 800 yards, such as the U.S. Marines picking off advancing German infantry at the Battles of Belleau Wood and Chateau Thierry in France in 1918, at ranges from 600-800 yards. The rear sight even is slanted or canted to the right to correct for spin drift due to the right-handed rifling. The 8mm (7.92x57mm) Mauser is a hard-hitting round, effective in combat, but the 30-06 improves upon it by being flatter-shooting, and using a more practical range of bullet weights, from 150-173 grains. The heavier 8mm round retains momentum well at extreme range, but long-range performance is hampered by a poor ballistic coefficient. The 30-06 simply gets the job done.
@@0Asterite0 - Yes, that's right... in fact, the Mausers which armed Spanish and Cuban forces in the Battle for San Juan Heights in 1898 were largely 7x57 mm Mausers.
Ehh...as someone who has drilled with the M1903, used it, etc, compared to the Mauser...that isn't true. All Mausers are not created equal. The 1893 or 1895 Mauser variants the US would have come across in the 1898 War vs Spain were not as well built as latter models. I'll take a 98 Mauser over the 1903 anyday....30-06 ammo is great nut not as plentiful. If a World War or Apocalypse came.out that ammo would run dry very fast....not 308 though.
@@Nperez1986 - OK, fair-enough.... if you like Mausers, good on you. And yes, I know not all Mausers were created equal. The design went through a number of refinements and changes over the years. Me, I'll stick with a M1903 or M1917 instead, if I am looking for a mil-surp bolt-gun. I would very much like to find a M1938 Swedish Mauser whose sights actually are alligned properly, or one chambered in 7x57, for one of the South American contracts. That is also a very nice cartridge. Yeah, all of the surplus 30-06 from years past is pretty much gone, at least in these parts. Which suggests that if you have a mil-surp gun you want to use as a shooter and often, target shooting or hunting, for example, then it might make sense to rebarrel it in 308. If it is an old gun, I'd run the rifle past a gun smith to make sure it was good-to-go for using modern ammo, though. But if you intend to use M80 Ball only, that pretty closely matches the performance of '06 M2 Ball, so you'll probably be OK and your sights will still work fine, too.
@@Nperez1986 Same here and I own 6 mausers one sml ring Carl Gustf 96 and five m98 , two are sweddish and 2 are m98 1943 stamp Mauser-Werke A. G. Oberndorf and the other is a m98k mfg 1945. All are sporterizer in 30-06 or 280remington. These are some of the best rifle ever made. I will get rid of the 6.5x55 when I use up my stash of ammo and buty 6.5 creedmore barrel for my encore frame only because ammo is readily available for the cali in walmart and academy.
Got one sporterized . Dude did a great job with the walnut stock and cheek rest , good leupold rings and a millet 3x9 . It needs a more powerful scope because this rifle is capable
I bought a Sporterized M1903A3 Smith Corona at a local gun shop for $479 in August of 2020. This month I finished the restoration of it back into military configuration.
I bought one last weekend that was almost totally in military configuration except it has that aftermarket 10 round magazine however I did find an original floor plate however I forgot to look at the magazine well to see if the spring and catch plate were still there, would you happen to know if it could possibly still be there or do I need to order those as well, I don’t have much knowledge with vintage firearms and I had to leave home for awhile due to work. Thanks for any pointers you may have and thanks in advance for any help you may have.
@@michaelbenjmitchell1 I forgot to mention a few other things the trigger guard appears to be a milled so I bought a milled floor plate my is a low number Springfield in the 377,000 range so would that be appropriate for the time frame so I would need more guidance as far as milled assemblies, if I’m not mistaken the 03a3s were all stamped.
@@Mustang6971 The 03A3's had the stamped unit which was one piece. Mine came with the milled Trigger guard/Magazine. If yours is in that serial range then yes it would be milled but some 1903's did end up getting rearsenaled which ended up with the stamped trigger guard.
@@michaelbenjmitchell1 I did some research I’m 90% mine is still milled because or the u shaped trigger guard instead of the tigger guard that has the flattened edge
Point of order, that rear/third lug on the 1903, ‘03A3, as well as the ‘98 Mauser is a Safety Lug, not a Locking Lug. If you look closely on the ‘03’s, you can see that there is a small gap between the lug rear and the adjoining surface of the receiver ring. The idea is that after a catastrophic bolt or lug failure [not sure this happened absent an explosive-level ammo overload or remarkable headspace or heat-treat screwup], the safety lug surface would smack into the receiver ring and skew the bolt off-kilter bleeding off it’s rearward velocity.
I shot my 1903 20 years ago and couldn't remember all of the functions. It hurt my shoulder then and would much more so now. The bolt thing was changed, serial # in the 11k. Looking forward to shooting it again regardless.
I had a 03A3 in military school in the late 80s. We spun them and threw them like nothing. Still not sure how we did that. Although when they were occasionally dropped, even back when they were more plentiful, it was still painful to see. What I wouldn't kill to have another one.
I inherited a Springfield 1903. I have read that these rifle's with serial #'s under 800,000 are unsafe to shoot due to improper heat treating. and got rid of it
@Kasey Turchin that’s my opinion I have a Springfield in the 377,000 range and I shoot it I only use 30-06 Springfield in 150 grain the same ammo I send though my Garand.
i have a nice 4 groove smith corona 03 a3 it is still a nail driver !! its hard to miss with it.... a 6 groove barrel is a seriously rare find.. equal to a leprchaun riding a unicorn in a 4 leaf clover patch..
klee77721 I have both. I paid $750 for a Remington 03a3, and 699 for a springfield 03. Those were pretty lucky prices and took time of waiting and searching. Expect to see them for 900 or more. More than once have I seen them for 1200. They use 30.06 springfield.
One difference between the 03 and the 03A3. Most 03A3's were produced using a barrel, rifled with only two very wide lands and grooves, and the older 03 barrel has six lands and grooves. This difference is not supposed to have any effect on the accuracy of either rifle when compared with the other.
The numbers thing is because of Julian Hatchers testing the 03 with extremely hot cartridges that are past proofing. If the rifle was going to blow up it would have years ago because all of them were used.
Mine is a SA 03 with a 568,000 sn but has had a Barrel change so it is a HS (High Standard stamped 44) it also has the Hatcher hole in the receiver ( Also you don't do a barrel change for no reason so the original was probably worn out). I've done some research and I have concluded that the problem had more to do with the Ammo of the day more that the Heat Treating. Hatcher talks about the issue in his book and there were no failures reported after 1930. Marines used these rifles well into WW2. More to this than just Heat Treating. Just my opinion. I shoot 30/06 Surplus ammo not new with higher pressures.
If you do get a low serial number make sure you use the lightest load possible. If you reload I recommend a 150 grain bullet with about 42 grains hodg 4895.
I enjoyed you 1903 and A3 video. I own both great shooters. But I would like to see a comparison between the 2 different A3 manufactors. Remington and an early (6 groove) Smith Corona.
Was it the low serial numbers that were made to shoot the 30-03 round -vs- the 30-06 round? Is that the difference for the single heat treat of the lower numbers as well?
My grandfather was on the USS Pennsylvania in 1927 and was a 'China Marine'. Can you tell me what the issue rifle was for those Marines? Was it a version of the 1903? If so, which one?
If in the 1920s, a Springfield M1903 or M1903A1 would have been the arm of choice - or perhaps one manufactured at the Rock Island Arsenal. If the history of "China Marines" fascinates you, consider the epic fictional series "The Corps" by WEB Griffin, a multi-volume series which follows a cast of characters from the pre-war China Marine Corps to Korea. Griffin is not only a tremendous writer of fiction; he does his homework as a historian as well. His books are not only entertaining, but educational as well. They're all in paperback now, since the series was concluded about a decade ago.
@ jstranhan2 - That's totally cool about your grandfather! He'd have been issued either a M1903 or M1903A1, most-likely, possibly even an Enfield M1917 - but probably not, since the production of M1903s had by that time caught up with peacetime demand by the U.S. Army and Marine Corps. If you've ever seen the 1966 film, "The Sand Pebbles," many of the weapons used during that between-the-wars era are shown in use by the hypothetical crew of the shallow-draft steamer/gunboat. BARs, Springfield M1903 30-06 rifles, M1911 45 ACP pistols, Remington M1897 12-gauge pump-guns, etc. It's a good film, starring Steve McQueen and a bunch of other well-known actors and actresses from that era. The U.S. Army officially adopted the new U.S. Rifle, 30-06, Model M-1 a.k.a. the Garand, in 1937, and by the time the war began rearming of many U.S. Army units with the new rifle had been completed, but the Marines had not yet switched over, preferring to stick with their Springfield bolt-actions. It was the Solomon Islands campaigns which convinced the 'Corps of the need to adopt the Garand, which they did in short order. The Army Ordnance Corps supplied the Corps with their small arms in those days, so the USMC did not get supplied until the army was ready to supply them. Fortunately, by mid-war, there were enough M-1s around to accommodate both branches.
@@GeorgiaBoy1961 : Thank you for the info. However, the picture I have of him on the Pennsylvania is from 1927. I don't think the A1 came out until 1929.
now just a minute here. wasnt the A3 designation indicating that the rifle had been rebuilt in 1943 after it was replaced by the M1 garand? they were supposed to have done a full rebuild. barrels headspace bolts.
@ Alex -My former gunsmith, a retired U.S. Army Special Forces scout-sniper, told me that those two-groove Springfields are often excellent, very accurate barrels, especially for using heavier-than-standard bullets. People assume that only two grooves isn't sufficient, but many of these rifles are very accurate if you take the time to find the load they like. Not surprising, really, since many 03A3s were scoped and used as sniper rifles.
Hello, you did your homework. I had a 1903 Springfield and ended up selling. The sights were to hard for my older eyes. Probably better for younger eyes. I now have a 1903A3 Smith Corona 1943 . The sight is much better on my eyes. I noticed you were shooting commercial ammo. This is where reloading comes in to play. Each barrel has a sweet spot, therefore when you adjust powders, bullets, and seating your grouping gets tighter. These are accurate rifles. Enjoy and thanks for the education...
does that extra switch on the side make any sense ? maybe if you want to shoot just one special bullet maybe some armor piercing tip or something but for saving ammunition seems unnecessary
' SUGGEST YOU ADD COLOR TO THE FRONT SITE, TRY WHITE OR ORANGE ON ONE SIDE FACING THE FRONT SITE AND SHOOT AGAIN, SHOULD BE ABLE TO PULL INTO A 1 1/2" GROUP WITH AN O6 '
You got some info wrong...a panel was set up by the government to see if they infringed on mausers patents and sent one over to the mauser factory for them to see if they did. The germans and the government agreed on I think $0.75 per rifle and $0.25 per 1000 stripper clips up until a maximum of $200,000 was reached. Which was paid before WW1 started.
lol that on and off thing is kinda the opposite of what you would think you would think when it says off the mag cut off would not be on and when the mag cut off is on it would say on but who knows why they did it that way
Dom Andriacchi I found an excellent M1903 on www.gunsinternational.com. It’s a 1918 born on date with a 813,XXX serial number. It was arsenal refurbished in 1942...”C” stock, new barrel and whatever else was required for re-issue. Original 1918 bayonet (with scabbard) and cleaning kit were included. There where many ‘03 (and ‘03-A3) listings besides the one I chose. The rifle is in excellent condition and shoots much better than my tired old eyes or I deserve....lol. The price was a bit over $1000.
Xikun Gao the Remington 1903s were built in the 1941-1944(?) era and way newer than the low serial numbered ones. I haven't. Played with them for awhile so going by memory, which is suspect at my age, but Remington serial numbers started in the 3 million range. I have a Rem 1903 made in Sept 1942 and a Smith Corona 1903a3 made the same month.
Xikun Gao by I've had mine for better than 20 years so prices are a lot different today. Prices seem to be based on condition of course but also by the part of the country you live in. LSt year I sold a 1918 Springfield for $695. Arsenal redo with a 1944 barrel.
I spin for my hs drill team, I got hit in the head by a front sight of a "drillified" 1903, now I realize that its based on the 1903 a3 with the shark fin on the front sight removed, as well our team removed the facsimile of the rear sight, but its still 8 pounds and the action works(albeit just using a nut in a groove, and not actually any working "firearm" parts
Good video! I'd like to point out one thing though. Don't play with an old rifle in the house with live ammo in the gun. You may forget if you have chambered one.
The stripper clips originally were purchased from Mauser because, (1) The base dimensions are near identical and, (2) The price was right. Springfield bought many millions before they began making their own.
I have 2, and on mine, the safety is . All the way to the left= fire . Straight up = safe. To the right = locked. When locked, the bolt and trigger are locked. In safe only the trigger is, and the bolt can be worked.
I enlarged the peep hole on my 03 Springfield and seeing the front sight was so much easier to pick up and find the target. As far as using in battle my preference had I been a soldier back then in combat, I think the 03 springfield regular sight would have been easier to acquire a target than trying to find the target in the peep of the A3. Just my thought.
The trick for using the M1903A1 for general military/field use would be to use the battlesight zero notch. That's how the Army and Marine Corps used to instruct their infantrymen, i.e., if the target was inside 250-300 yards, just use the BSZ notch and hold under as needed. The other parts of the sights are for specific uses, but take longer to deploy. Most BSZ notches come out around ~ 545 yards, which would mean about a 12" hold under at 100 yards, for example. 545 yards is a long ways off, but back when this rifle and its sights were designed, the memory of long-distance rifle fights like the Battle of San Juan Hill in Cuba in 1898, and Spoin Kop in South Africa in 1900, led military planners to believe that in the future, most rifle engagements would be at fairly long range. Of course, World War One changed that perception somewhat, but by then the rifle/sights were in use, and would remain in use until the late 1930s and into WWII. Finally, when the M1903A3 came out, it utilized a much simpler ramp-style rear sight graduated to 800 yards maximum. Call me crazy, but I actually prefer the M1906 sights found on those early Springfields.....
@@GeorgiaBoy1961 you're spot on with your knowledge. When I would take my 03 to the range I was shooting at a black silhouette target. My POA was the 6 oclock of the target which if it were a live human target my POA would be his belly button lol. My POI would always be center of the chest and that's pretty much a kill shot in any war. Thanks for sharing that info.
@@easttexan2933 - Yeah, you bet. Happy to meet another '03 fan! I'll never forget taking the very first M1903 I ever owned - a 1903A3 with two-groove barrel - to the range to test her out, some years ago. Had a great time and everything, but she did kick a bit with that steel buttplate. Got home and went to take a shower and I noticed my whole right-side (my shooting side) shoulder area was bruised a variety of yellow, blue, green, and other pretty colors! Toughen up, butter-cup! LOL! Those men back then were tough sons-of-guns, weren't they?? Bet they didn't bitch about stuff like that!
@@GeorgiaBoy1961 something tells me that a doughboy cranking out 100-300 rounds non stop against a German advance across open ground is certainly not worried about bruising. And he certainly isn't trying to acquire a target in the peep lol. Watched a movie last night called ' All Quiet on the Western Front '. You know as well as I that was an absolute terrible war and the conditions under which they fought was even more terrible. It's on Netflix. Highly recommend. I'm 76 and up until about 10 years ago I had acquired a rather nice collection of WWI and WWII rifles. I got remarried 10 years ago and life has taken us in a different direction (which I fully endorsed because I've never been happier) and I started selling off my collection. I had Remington, Eddystone, and Winchester Model 1917's, 03's 03A3's, 3 different makes of Garands, M1 carbines, several different makes of models of Enfields, Swedish Mausers, almost every wartime code of K98's, several matching numbers. All these were acquired many years ago when they weren't so dang expensive. Garands could still be had for $4-500. Nagant 91/30 for $60. Anyway, I lost interest and now all I have is a Remington 1100 that my son used to kill his first deer, a converted Model 96 Swede to a gorgeous hunting rifle, a JC Higgins Model 51 30-06, and Marlin 336XLR 30-30, and a Ruger 10/22 and a Ruger SR22. Don't miss it but just a little lol.
@@easttexan2933 - Well, good on you for getting while the gettin' was good, as they say down home....I wish I'd been around in those days of cheap muscle cars, cheap gas, and cheaper mil-surps! Well, I was - but I was just a boy in the 1960s. You are 15 years older than I am. "All's Quiet on the Western Front" is a classic novel of that war from 1929, and so is the 1930 film. I actually found the remake starring Ernest Borgnine and Richard Thomas to be rather good, that was from 1979. There's a 2022 version, too, but I don't know anything about it and haven't seen it (if it is even out yet). Those eighteen-nineteen year old doughboys firing on enemy troops had other things on their minds than sore shoulders... that would come later, if at all. You heal fast when you are that age. Thanks for writing....
Just put a deposit on a A3 O3 $449. Made 8/44 stamped on tip of barrel, owe $349... Jan 11th mine... rifle customized, Monte Carlo stock... Had to have it...
The international courts found 17 mauser patents were stolen but we did quit paying royalties at the start of WW1. They say the 98 was built to be perfectly engineered, the 1903 was built for target shooting, and the 303 was built for war.
Re: "They say the 98 was built to be perfectly engineered, the 1903 was built for target shooting, and the 303 was built for war." Yeah, but who is "they"? It's a B.S. saying anyway. Only the Lee-Enfield fanboys believe that crap anyway. Lee-Enfields were great rifles in the day in WWI, and just the thing the Tommies in the trenches needed at the time, but the rifle was obsolete by WWII. Strangely, even after seeing the Americans, their allies, use semi-automatic rifles throughout the war, the British MOD still clung to bolt-actions, and gave the army the No. 5 Mk. I, a.k.a. the Jungle Carbine, which saw action in the Malayan Emergency. They were plagued by reports of wandering zeros, but maybe the British soldier finally figured out that they needed a self-loading rifle for a change, hence the SLR or FAL. The .303 cartridge is powerful-enough for war, and much hunting besides, but it is a pain in the neck due to its rim. It would have been better to be a rimless design, and then there would have been no real need for .308/7.62 NATO, since the .303 makes 90-95 % the power of the short-action .308-caliber cartridge. The Lee-Enfield bolt-action itself is rightly known as the fastest-cycling bolt-action to have seen military use, but it acquired that speed at the expense of some other desired attributes in a rifle, including strength and rigidity. The LE action has never been used by any modern hunting rifle manufacturer, to my knowledge, as the basis for any new production due to the inherent relative weakness of the LE receiver and bolt, which simply are not as strong as the Mauser design. This is why you seldom see LE mil-surp rifles sporterized and converted to more powerful calibers or cartridges; it isn't safe to do this with one, like it is with a German Mauser, or a M1917 or M1903 or even an Arisaka (these had the strongest actions of all bolt-action rifles, according to tests done post-war by P.O. Ackley, the American gunsmith of some renown. In short, the L-E bolt gun was an evolutionary dead-end as a design. Anyone who claims the Springfield M1903 is inadequate in any way or lacking as a combat rifle, doesn't know the subject matter well-enough to comment. U.S. Marines used M1903 Springfields in 1918 at the Battles of Cateau Thierry and Belleau Wood, to pick off German landsers (infantry) advancing through the French wheat fields, at distances of up to 800 yards, using nothing more than iron sights and good Marine fundamentals of marksmanship. Astonished French onlookers exclaimed that they had never seen such proficient long-range combat marksmanship. And don't even get me started about how much better as a cartridge is the 30-06, than the 303.
Got my 03A3 as a barreled action some 55 years ago, before the Dodd Anti-gun Act of 1968. The magazine well is from an 03 (milled, not stamped). I put a Fajan stock on it. Its favorite MILSURP ammo is M2AP. The range I used had a hillside 1/4 mile thick, so penetration was not an issue. If I do my part, you could cover a 3 shot group with a dime at 100 yards.
I like aperture rear sights. I learned that in the Army on an M1 Garand. That was why I fell in love with the .30-06 cartridge.
Funny enough I just bought a 1903A3 fitting that description a few weeks ago.
I got one about a year ago now and at 100 yards I got a 5 shot 1 hole group, then my friend replicated it.
My father gave me an 03-A3 nearly 40 yrs ago but passed away before briefing me on operation, thanks for the info.
that is a true treasure! thanks for watching
Just shot my low number 1903 two days ago and man is she smooth and accurate! I love the flip up sights
Thanks for taking the time to make and share. My first 30 caliber rifle I bought at 16 was a M1903A3 and I promptly put it to work killing groundhogs. Yes, you can actually kill a groundhog with a 30-06. Repeat shots never needed. Nice rifle and I still have it over 40 years later.
This is the second of your videos I've watched I like that you keep it moving quickly. A note on the mag cut off switch, it was also used when a soldier might want to load a armor-piercing, tracer or Incendiary round to mark a target at night time. One of the reasons I favor the 30.06 is the multitude of various ammunition available, one can shoot prairie dogs with 110 grains in the afternoon and kill deer at dusk with a 220 grain soft point. Also the 30.06 round is pretty much flat out to 150 yards that's why the low end of those sights you mentioned were at 200 yards. Believe it or not during early Vietnam some 1903A3s were used as sniper rifles. Keep it up, you do a good job here.
Harder to come by in Australia but they are around. They command a premium over the Enfield because of this but are worth the spend for sure. And 30-06 is probably the best all around calibre ever made. Great review 🇦🇺👍🏻
ill trade you my enfield for one.. well not yours.. Someones.. ANYones
@ Australian Made - "And 30-06 is probably the best all around calibre ever made. Great review"
Firearms trainer and author Kenneth Royce, better known in the firearms community as "Boston" of "Boston's Gun Bible" fame, put it best, saying of the 30-06 that it was a "home-run" and the most influential cartridge of the 20th century. He'd probably get some argument there, since there are other contenders - British 303, 7.92x57/8mm Mauser, 7.62x54R, etc. - but it is hard to argue with its popularity, versatility or longevity. It remains the most-popular center-fire cartridge in the world, and for good reason. It can handle an astonishingly wide range of bullet types and weights, ranging from 80 to 220 grains, and can do everything from varmint-hunting to the taking of giant bears, as well as its storied military and competition histories. And handloaders using modern propellants and high-BC bullets can squeeze 300 near-Win-Mag performance out of it when it comes to LR shooting.
There are specific cartridges and loads that surpass the venerable '06 in certain ways, but it is difficult to think of a single cartridge which does so many things as well. King and still champion after more than a century.
I had a sporterized Springfield 03-A3 with a full float barrel and peep sight. With this rifle I learned how to shoot high power. I can remember shooting an 8 shot 6" group while standing with a GI sling at 150 yds. I'm not the greatest shot but this rifle has given me a lot of great memories! Thanks for a great review!
"Sporterized"=Fudderized...
🤬🤬🤬
I've got a Remington 1903a3 I picked up a year or two ago and it's one of my favorites. I had an older 1903 about 20 years ago that I had sold when I was in a financial pinch and had been wanting another for a while. Finally found one I liked for a price I was willing to pay and picked up an A3 this time. I have to say that I like the aperture rear sight much better than the blade style that my older model had. For me it was easier to put on target. Probably because I also spent a lot of time shooting my Garand and M1 Carbines. To me it is the best of the Mauser style bolt action war rifles. I have an early WWII K98k and I prefer my 1903a3.
I also had to sell mine when I left Hawaii I miss it
@@KIMO365 There are plenty on Gunbroker. They aren't going to get any cheaper so best time to get one is now. Unless you moved to a place that prohibits firearms ownership.
I have an '03a3 and prefer my 1893 Mauser 7x57 , both great ! Choose your flavor 👍
@@davegeisler7802 The great thing about the mauser style action is that there are MANY to pick from used by most of Europe, and central and south America as well. I've since picked up a Brazilian 08/35 in .30-06 and it is amazing.
Just picked up a 03a3 Remington drill receiver last summer, got a NOS 2 grove Remington barrel that was only a month newer than the receiver, I have all the mechanical parts assembled and checked out, now i need the stock and hardware to finish it.
Good choice if it's an actual 2 land mil. Barrel. They put a hole as a close group.
Remington didn't make the barrels for the '03a3, they were made by High Standard Co. for both the Remington and Smith-Corona rifles.
@@dianaalfieri18 it will when I do my part, I'm working out an issue with the front sight and haven't had time to sort it out, but the rifle is done.
@@David-q1k4k with the RA and SC stamps? I've seen high standard stamped barrels on some.
@@remiel3315 yes, High Standard was the main sub contractor for the barrels.
Good vid. I recently found an SA M1903A1 with a good sn. It was made in 1918 and refurbed in 1942. Had to have it! Even as a kid I loved these rifles and could spot them in war movies & documentaries. At 64 my eyes ain’t what they used to be so getting used those sights was a real bear. Still managed to keep everything in the 8 ring at 100 yds. The Springfield is a work of art.
Good job, great review. Good to see someone from Hawaii talking about guns. Originally from Hawaii, living in Idaho now. Keep up the good work.
Im surprised its legal to own guns in Hawaii but i guess they're necessary for hunting.
A family member of mine had one when I was a kid. It had an old Unertl or Fecker scope on it and I could barely lift it. Same family member shot CMP matches with it before the scope was put on and he free free floated the barrel but you could not tell by looking at it. He had 2 barrels for it. It was an A3. Don't know that I have ever seen a stripper clip for one though.
Sir.....
This a great VIDEO........!!!!
I had NO idea about all of the differences between the 2 Rifles.
Thank you for your video.
Hey Brudda! That was the kind video! Thanks, from an old Aiea Heights resident from the 1960's.
much Mahalos thanks for watching
11:24
It has officially been OVER 100 years, I believe if the reciver was going to blow it would have during WW2. I have my great grandpas 1903 cerial No 287,XXX. Ended WW1, fought WW2 and opened camp Pendleton with him. I've shot this rifle myself many times. Given there are always exceptions and I'm sure one of these days another will blow and it will make th news, but is the low cerial gets to you, leave it for me
Edit: typo
Don't shit your rifle man
@@arthurmead5341 I have no plans of even EATING my rifle... Shiting it out just seems painful
@@arthurmead5341 unless you ment shoot, in which case you're about half a decade to late, I've put around 500 rounds through it
@@chriscary4074 i was just quoting you!
@@arthurmead5341 I missed that, sorry... Shiting a rifle still sounds painful
Great Review, I have a Remington 1903A3. I love That Rifle
had so much fun shooting these
I have one too. I have never fired it; it is an unfired piece. I bought it in 1976.
Dialojike That is very awesome
Same year I bought my Remington 1903A3. I was a senior in high school, and I bought it at a local shopping mall in Los Angeles county. They put a long, skinny plastic bag over it and I walked right through the mall and out into the parking lot with nary a sideways glance from the public (try THAT today in LA, lol!) I never had a bit of trouble until trying to smuggle it in the house past my mom... that didn't go quite as well, since Mom knew a BB gun from a battle rifle.
@@KIMO365 kim... They make different heights of front sight blades... Look around at the next gun show. There's usually a vendor or two that specializes in U.S. military parts. Should put you back on target in no time.
The quality of this video is so good I had to subscribe
Good video, easy to understand. I agree that the original 1903 was a cooler looking rifle but the '03-A3 was easier to use because of the increased sight radius. Both of these old beauties could be purchased for rock bottom prices back in the 80's and 90's but the prices have edged up because many folks are hanging on to them more than they used to. Also, the CMP no longer has any of the 1903's to sell as surplus so it's now your best luck at gun shows, Gunbroker, or local gun shops.
One last note, if you have an original, PLEASE don't hack it up to make another deer rifle! Go buy a factory rifle and leave these ol' pieces of US military history alone!!! Thanks!
Hi Kimo, new subscriber here. I just picked up my 1903 A3 today. It's stamped U.S. Remington on top of the receiver and the rear sights were very loose on receipt. It was refurbished and I'm going to give it another thorough inspection and cleaning before I take it to the range to test fire. I collect vintage milsurp rifles and this is just the latest addition to my collection. I need to attach a sling, purchase some stripper clips and at some later date, find a bayonet (don't care if it's a reproduction) for it.
I know this is an old video, but thanks for the upload... very well made and informative
Just bought a M1903 Remington manufactured during late 1942, what a handsome rifle.
Thanks for the info on the stripper clips from Creedmore. I have been using old 7mm striper clipps made for the Mauser 1895 Chilean.I like the M1903 as a rifleman and yes the sights are complicated like you said.I shoot a lot of Mausers and Lee Enfields but you can beat the M1903 as a good target rifle even though it was a general issue infantry rifle.The M1903A3 is an excellent rifle for combat because of the peep sight which simplified training and guys using the M1 Garand will shoot just as good with it once they get used to the recoil.For the modern guy the peep sight would be more familiar if they shoot the M16/AR series using the battle sights.Plenty mahalos from Vegas Brah!!!Aloha!!!
Ive only recently become interested in these rifles. What i like about bolt action is theres no wasted energy like with an ar15. Takes a portion of gas to work ejector and reload. And ive noticed the mauser seems very well engineered.
Gas guns use otherwise lost energy. The amount of gas used is really small, and happens after the bullet is long gone from the barrel. A self loader is more efficient whatever the operating principle.
Hey bro. I climbed up that mountain in the background behind your shooting range... I think. Koko Crater. Awesome view from up there.
If I'm not mistaken, the rear safety lug should not be touching the back of the reciever correct? In mix and matched guns where it is locked against the receiver at the rear, I don't know if the main lugs are locked against the lugs in the reciever, or if they are slightly off, being held off by the safety lug, hence all pressure on the back of the receiver every time you shoot. When there is about a mm of space in between the safety lug and the reciever, if the main lugs fail, it will catch on the safety lug, also, you know for sure that the main lugs are locked. Is this true, I've heard this somewhere before.
To my notion, the Devil Dog Marines plinking of German sunbathers remains the gold standard for long range shooting.
My father was on the North Georgia College honor guard for the funeral for retired professor, Dr. Gaillard. He dropped his ‘03 in the snow and ice. Thirty six years later I got my glove stuck in my M1 during NGC battalion drill competition in low 20s weather and high winds.
Best I have seen, so far. I had thought the M1903A was a Naval Rifle. I remember hearing about the "Mauser" design thefts. I found the Brit's Mk1#1 a much smoother action. (Yes, the wire wrap was removed from the SME Mk1#1, but the launcher sight was left in place.)
I'm sure someone has already noted these two things. One, the bolt is actually slightly different than a mauser. Mauser's have only the two front lugs and a different cocking mechanism. Two the magazine cut off was made for loading blanks to fire a rifle grenade.
Lots of good information I haven't seen anywhere else--a must watch for anyone looking to buy an M1903,
I grew up shooting my father's A3 when they were for sale for $18.00 in the back of the NRA magazine. It now belongs to my son. Anyway, I was always told that the on/off switch was mainly for when you were in the heat of battle and your magazine was empty, you would know to refill and not just close the bolt, thinking you had a round chambered.
Thanks for the details man… just got my 1903A3 and ready to try it out
Great review! I own a Springfield 03 Mark 1 and I live in Springfield Mass where the Springfield Armory used to be. Armory is now a college and a U.S. National Historic Site with an incredible museum. Thanks for the video. Good stuff.
I have a Remington A3 dated on barrel as 42, from an old 1903 operations manual it state that the bolt cutoff selector is use for firing blanks when outfitted w/ a rifle grenade popular option back in it's day, that way in combat you still had live rounds ready to use. The rifle grenade adaptor disconnected from the barrel just like a bayonet from my understanding. The sights on the A3 were implemented as a transition type of sight because it was so similar to the M-1 Garand sites that were just coming into service starting 1939, the sight were to get the old troops up to speed on the new Garand type of sight, good video thanks.
Excellent comparison. I marched many a mile with the 03A3 years ago at Navy boot Great Lakes. Didn't much appreciate it much back then, fast forward to now after owning several of both......... I LOVE shooting my A3's, use scoped version as one of my goto deer rifles.
I just bought a national ordinance 1903 a3 from the consignment rack at a local shop, and whoever left it with them to sell it, (or perhaps the person they Inherited it from) had turned it into a custom sporter. The stock has a rubber cushion and a cheek well, and less excitingly, the sights have been completely changed and the rear sight now sits well infront of the action, and the front sight has a big ol hood over it. As I picked it up for approximately the cost of a hi point carbine, I really don't have any room to complain. I just hope the old adjustable rear sight can still be mounted, and I can find one that still works on ebay.
The Krag was America's first magazine fed rifle, but thanks for a great video on the M1903!
A guy needs one of each. Yeah, the heat treating (SCARE) thing is mostly baloney, these things held up just fine and many still dropping deer, elk and such today. They last forever.
I have two 98k Mauser Rifles and two Lee Enfields the SMLE MK3 a WW1 variant & the No.4 Mk1 the WW2 variant
Since it's a Mauser claw CRF, you still want to push the head of the round down into the magazine to protect the claw extractor when using the mag cutoff feature. It only prevents existing rounds in the mag from feeding due to position in the magazine.
Regarding "trick drill team" use, hes, they do beat you up. Braking one in a spin really stings, but the 03-A3 (and by extension any M98 "cock on open" rifle) might be the best rifle for cool tricks you can do with the bolt, as in "Inspection Arms."
I was given my grandfathers 03 when I was a kid. I have the receipt for $18.00 he paid for it. He sporterized it way back. There was no internet when I got it and that magazine cutoff was blowing my mind. It makes sense now but I was hunting with it in OFF, and it wouldn't take another round. It was good at the range, but after I cleaned it and put the bolt back in I flipped it and when I went out I lost a follow up shot at an Elk. Dumb kid I was. I love the old thing. I refinished the stock, bedded it, parkerized it, and put a newer Burris scope on it. I have had trouble getting tight groups but it does OK.
The M1903 sights are definitely a challenge. But remember....along with quick reflexes a18-19 year old soldier’s eyesight is incredible as is the ability to hold the rifle steady. Also withIn the range of the battle sights....”V” notch ladder down, no computation was necessary.
Springfield M1903 rifles have acquired a reputation in some circles as a mere "copy" of the Mauser Brothers paradigm-changing bolt-action family of rifles, but the M1903 stands on its own - and deserves to do so - for a number of significant improvements its designers made over the Mauser. The trigger on the M1903 was superior to that on the Mauser, and easier to tune. The sights on the American design are excellent, really a technological marvel for their time. Although some users find them hard to use, they aren't too challenging once one knows the rifle and takes the time to understand the sights, which were designed with maximum flexibility in mind - offering a battle-sight zero notch for snap-shooting, and a choice of apertures on the ladder sights, which are graduated to 2,400 yards. Why such an extravagant distance? Because in those days (c. 1900), the infantryman's rifle was considered an area-denial weapon when fired in volley, i.e., simultaneous fire by a section of men upon a distant target. However, the M1903 was superbly accurate out to 1,000 yards against point targets, and there are numerous instances of effective and precise fire in combat at ranges out to 800 yards, such as the U.S. Marines picking off advancing German infantry at the Battles of Belleau Wood and Chateau Thierry in France in 1918, at ranges from 600-800 yards. The rear sight even is slanted or canted to the right to correct for spin drift due to the right-handed rifling. The 8mm (7.92x57mm) Mauser is a hard-hitting round, effective in combat, but the 30-06 improves upon it by being flatter-shooting, and using a more practical range of bullet weights, from 150-173 grains. The heavier 8mm round retains momentum well at extreme range, but long-range performance is hampered by a poor ballistic coefficient. The 30-06 simply gets the job done.
mausers were also in 7x57 you know
@@0Asterite0 - Yes, that's right... in fact, the Mausers which armed Spanish and Cuban forces in the Battle for San Juan Heights in 1898 were largely 7x57 mm Mausers.
Ehh...as someone who has drilled with the M1903, used it, etc, compared to the Mauser...that isn't true. All Mausers are not created equal. The 1893 or 1895 Mauser variants the US would have come across in the 1898 War vs Spain were not as well built as latter models. I'll take a 98 Mauser over the 1903 anyday....30-06 ammo is great nut not as plentiful. If a World War or Apocalypse came.out that ammo would run dry very fast....not 308 though.
@@Nperez1986 - OK, fair-enough.... if you like Mausers, good on you. And yes, I know not all Mausers were created equal. The design went through a number of refinements and changes over the years. Me, I'll stick with a M1903 or M1917 instead, if I am looking for a mil-surp bolt-gun. I would very much like to find a M1938 Swedish Mauser whose sights actually are alligned properly, or one chambered in 7x57, for one of the South American contracts. That is also a very nice cartridge.
Yeah, all of the surplus 30-06 from years past is pretty much gone, at least in these parts. Which suggests that if you have a mil-surp gun you want to use as a shooter and often, target shooting or hunting, for example, then it might make sense to rebarrel it in 308. If it is an old gun, I'd run the rifle past a gun smith to make sure it was good-to-go for using modern ammo, though. But if you intend to use M80 Ball only, that pretty closely matches the performance of '06 M2 Ball, so you'll probably be OK and your sights will still work fine, too.
@@Nperez1986 Same here and I own 6 mausers one sml ring Carl Gustf 96 and five m98 , two are sweddish and 2 are m98 1943 stamp Mauser-Werke A. G. Oberndorf and the other is a m98k mfg 1945. All are sporterizer in 30-06 or 280remington.
These are some of the best rifle ever made. I will get rid of the 6.5x55 when I use up my stash of ammo and buty 6.5 creedmore barrel for my encore frame only because ammo is readily available for the cali in walmart and academy.
I have the A3. Love the rifle. It is my reach out and touch it rifle.
Really great technical run through! Thanks for the info!
There is a Smith Corona 1903A3 in the safe, a beautiful rifle.
Me too
Got one sporterized . Dude did a great job with the walnut stock and cheek rest , good leupold rings and a millet 3x9 . It needs a more powerful scope because this rifle is capable
Was it already trashed out?
I bought a Sporterized M1903A3 Smith Corona at a local gun shop for $479 in August of 2020. This month I finished the restoration of it back into military configuration.
I bought one last weekend that was almost totally in military configuration except it has that aftermarket 10 round magazine however I did find an original floor plate however I forgot to look at the magazine well to see if the spring and catch plate were still there, would you happen to know if it could possibly still be there or do I need to order those as well, I don’t have much knowledge with vintage firearms and I had to leave home for awhile due to work. Thanks for any pointers you may have and thanks in advance for any help you may have.
@@Mustang6971 Depends but the floorplate latch and spring would be on the inside of the trigger guard.
@@michaelbenjmitchell1 I forgot to mention a few other things the trigger guard appears to be a milled so I bought a milled floor plate my is a low number Springfield in the 377,000 range so would that be appropriate for the time frame so I would need more guidance as far as milled assemblies, if I’m not mistaken the 03a3s were all stamped.
@@Mustang6971 The 03A3's had the stamped unit which was one piece. Mine came with the milled Trigger guard/Magazine. If yours is in that serial range then yes it would be milled but some 1903's did end up getting rearsenaled which ended up with the stamped trigger guard.
@@michaelbenjmitchell1 I did some research I’m 90% mine is still milled because or the u shaped trigger guard instead of the tigger guard that has the flattened edge
Point of order, that rear/third lug on the 1903, ‘03A3, as well as the ‘98 Mauser is a Safety Lug, not a Locking Lug. If you look closely on the ‘03’s, you can see that there is a small gap between the lug rear and the adjoining surface of the receiver ring. The idea is that after a catastrophic bolt or lug failure [not sure this happened absent an explosive-level ammo overload or remarkable headspace or heat-treat screwup], the safety lug surface would smack into the receiver ring and skew the bolt off-kilter bleeding off it’s rearward velocity.
Just found a 1903A3 at a local pawn, it's in good condition. The 1903/ 03A3 my fav bolt action rifle
Great presentation, KIMO..!
I shot my 1903 20 years ago and couldn't remember all of the functions. It hurt my shoulder then and would much more so now. The bolt thing was changed, serial # in the 11k. Looking forward to shooting it again regardless.
Do you have a link to the stripper clips ?
I had a 03A3 in military school in the late 80s. We spun them and threw them like nothing. Still not sure how we did that. Although when they were occasionally dropped, even back when they were more plentiful, it was still painful to see. What I wouldn't kill to have another one.
I inherited a Springfield 1903. I have read that these rifle's with serial #'s under 800,000 are unsafe to shoot due to improper heat treating. and got rid of it
@Kasey Turchin that’s my opinion I have a Springfield in the 377,000 range and I shoot it I only use 30-06 Springfield in 150 grain the same ammo I send though my Garand.
Informative with good photography!
i have a nice 4 groove smith corona 03 a3 it is still a nail driver !! its hard to miss with it.... a 6 groove barrel is a seriously rare find.. equal to a leprchaun riding a unicorn in a 4 leaf clover patch..
So, the cracking is NOT an issue with 1903-A3s, correct? Is the Remington or the Smith Corona more valuable of the 1903-A3s?
well done ,, very informative and delivered perfectly !!!
Any issues with the remington serial number rangers? Or are all remingtons safe?
Are you familiar with the numrich arms extended magazine?
where can i get one,there seems to be none around. or for an outragious price
On the safety the left is fire, 12 o'clock is safe, and 3 o'clock locks the bolt closed and the rifle is safe- just like the Kaiser.
I own a new Remington .. made 1942 still has Cosmoline .. Carried a Springfield in Navy Boot Camp 1970 ...
Very informative will need to get one now. Just a quick question, price range? And ammo type (new) low power?
klee77721 I have both. I paid $750 for a Remington 03a3, and 699 for a springfield 03. Those were pretty lucky prices and took time of waiting and searching. Expect to see them for 900 or more. More than once have I seen them for 1200. They use 30.06 springfield.
One difference between the 03 and the 03A3. Most 03A3's were produced using a barrel, rifled with only two very wide lands and grooves, and the older 03 barrel has six lands and grooves. This difference is not supposed to have any effect on the accuracy of either rifle when compared with the other.
The numbers thing is because of Julian Hatchers testing the 03 with extremely hot cartridges that are past proofing. If the rifle was going to blow up it would have years ago because all of them were used.
I bought one in the 70s for 35dollars from the gun shop. Best rifle I ever shot. I did sportarize the stock for hunting .wish I never sold it
Mine is a SA 03 with a 568,000 sn but has had a Barrel change so it is a HS (High Standard stamped 44) it also has the Hatcher hole in the receiver ( Also you don't do a barrel change for no reason so the original was probably worn out). I've done some research and I have concluded that the problem had more to do with the Ammo of the day more that the Heat Treating. Hatcher talks about the issue in his book and there were no failures reported after 1930. Marines used these rifles well into WW2. More to this than just Heat Treating. Just my opinion. I shoot 30/06 Surplus ammo not new with higher pressures.
If you do get a low serial number make sure you use the lightest load possible. If you reload I recommend a 150 grain bullet with about 42 grains hodg 4895.
love your channel bruddah
I enjoyed you 1903 and A3 video. I own both great shooters. But I would like to see a comparison between the 2 different A3 manufactors. Remington and an early (6 groove) Smith Corona.
Billy Staggs Jr. that’ll be hard to come by!!
What is your opinion on why the park is "in the Green"
Was it the low serial numbers that were made to shoot the 30-03 round -vs- the 30-06 round? Is that the difference for the single heat treat of the lower numbers as well?
I have one but it chambered 308
Great video ,,,have an 03 made 1927..refurbished in 43,, where did you find the stripper clips,,,Thank You
My grandfather was on the USS Pennsylvania in 1927 and was a 'China
Marine'. Can you tell me what the issue rifle was for those Marines? Was
it a version of the 1903? If so, which one?
It would have been a M1903. The M1903A3 came out in WWII and none were given to the Marines.
If in the 1920s, a Springfield M1903 or M1903A1 would have been the arm of choice - or perhaps one manufactured at the Rock Island Arsenal. If the history of "China Marines" fascinates you, consider the epic fictional series "The Corps" by WEB Griffin, a multi-volume series which follows a cast of characters from the pre-war China Marine Corps to Korea. Griffin is not only a tremendous writer of fiction; he does his homework as a historian as well. His books are not only entertaining, but educational as well. They're all in paperback now, since the series was concluded about a decade ago.
@ jstranhan2 - That's totally cool about your grandfather! He'd have been issued either a M1903 or M1903A1, most-likely, possibly even an Enfield M1917 - but probably not, since the production of M1903s had by that time caught up with peacetime demand by the U.S. Army and Marine Corps. If you've ever seen the 1966 film, "The Sand Pebbles," many of the weapons used during that between-the-wars era are shown in use by the hypothetical crew of the shallow-draft steamer/gunboat. BARs, Springfield M1903 30-06 rifles, M1911 45 ACP pistols, Remington M1897 12-gauge pump-guns, etc. It's a good film, starring Steve McQueen and a bunch of other well-known actors and actresses from that era.
The U.S. Army officially adopted the new U.S. Rifle, 30-06, Model M-1 a.k.a. the Garand, in 1937, and by the time the war began rearming of many U.S. Army units with the new rifle had been completed, but the Marines had not yet switched over, preferring to stick with their Springfield bolt-actions. It was the Solomon Islands campaigns which convinced the 'Corps of the need to adopt the Garand, which they did in short order. The Army Ordnance Corps supplied the Corps with their small arms in those days, so the USMC did not get supplied until the army was ready to supply them. Fortunately, by mid-war, there were enough M-1s around to accommodate both branches.
@@GeorgiaBoy1961 : Thank you for the info. However, the picture I have of him on the Pennsylvania is from 1927. I don't think the A1 came out until 1929.
@@jstrahan2 - You're probably right. I should have checked before starting to write, but now that you did, I won't need to do it! Thanks!
now just a minute here. wasnt the A3 designation indicating that the rifle had been rebuilt in 1943 after it was replaced by the M1 garand? they were supposed to have done a full rebuild. barrels headspace bolts.
Great video!
Have a 1944 03A3 and love it. It will make 1 inch groups all day with the loads I worked up.
@ Alex -My former gunsmith, a retired U.S. Army Special Forces scout-sniper, told me that those two-groove Springfields are often excellent, very accurate barrels, especially for using heavier-than-standard bullets. People assume that only two grooves isn't sufficient, but many of these rifles are very accurate if you take the time to find the load they like. Not surprising, really, since many 03A3s were scoped and used as sniper rifles.
Hello, you did your homework. I had a 1903 Springfield and ended up selling. The sights were to hard for my older eyes. Probably better for younger eyes.
I now have a 1903A3 Smith Corona 1943 . The sight is much better on my eyes. I noticed you were shooting commercial ammo. This is where reloading comes in to play. Each barrel has a sweet spot, therefore when you adjust powders, bullets, and seating your grouping gets tighter. These are accurate rifles. Enjoy and thanks for the education...
does that extra switch on the side make any sense ? maybe if you want to shoot just one special bullet maybe some armor piercing tip or something but for saving ammunition seems unnecessary
TTC it did when it was made. Tactics changed and over time it was less necessary.
' SUGGEST YOU ADD COLOR TO THE FRONT SITE, TRY WHITE OR ORANGE ON ONE SIDE FACING THE FRONT SITE AND SHOOT AGAIN, SHOULD BE ABLE TO PULL INTO A 1 1/2" GROUP WITH AN O6 '
You got some info wrong...a panel was set up by the government to see if they infringed on mausers patents and sent one over to the mauser factory for them to see if they did. The germans and the government agreed on I think $0.75 per rifle and $0.25 per 1000 stripper clips up until a maximum of $200,000 was reached. Which was paid before WW1 started.
lol that on and off thing is kinda the opposite of what you would think you would think when it says off the mag cut off would not be on and when the mag cut off is on it would say on but who knows why they did it that way
What’s the best place or website to look for one of these
Dom Andriacchi I found an excellent M1903 on www.gunsinternational.com. It’s a 1918 born on date with a 813,XXX serial number. It was arsenal refurbished in 1942...”C” stock, new barrel and whatever else was required for re-issue. Original 1918 bayonet (with scabbard) and cleaning kit were included. There where many ‘03 (and ‘03-A3) listings besides the one I chose. The rifle is in excellent condition and shoots much better than my tired old eyes or I deserve....lol. The price was a bit over $1000.
is that a USMC 03a3?
Put Old English Lemon Oil Furniture polish on the wood. I use it on all my wooden stock rifles. Best wood treatment O have ever come across.
Light buffing with beeswax works 👍 adds Resistance to water as added bonus
I have a smith-corona 03-a3, my favorite gun to shoot
4 groove or 6 groove?
Love the walk through with of the mechanisms. Questions tho, are 1903s able to install sniper sights?
Also, does Remington's 1903 have this heat treatment serial number issue? Any response is appreciated.
Xikun Gao the Remington 1903s were built in the 1941-1944(?) era and way newer than the low serial numbered ones. I haven't. Played with them for awhile so going by memory, which is suspect at my age, but Remington serial numbers started in the 3 million range. I have a Rem 1903 made in Sept 1942 and a Smith Corona 1903a3 made the same month.
Richard Craig I see. I also noticed that the price of these rifles vary by a large range. Is this also something to do with the age of the weapon?
Xikun Gao by I've had mine for better than 20 years so prices are a lot different today. Prices seem to be based on condition of course but also by the part of the country you live in. LSt year I sold a 1918 Springfield for $695. Arsenal redo with a 1944 barrel.
Richard Craig I see. Thank you for the answers! :)
Hi ! All the 1903 have this dispersion at 100 yards ? Or he can do better ? Thank you
I spin for my hs drill team, I got hit in the head by a front sight of a "drillified" 1903, now I realize that its based on the 1903 a3 with the shark fin on the front sight removed, as well our team removed the facsimile of the rear sight, but its still 8 pounds and the action works(albeit just using a nut in a groove, and not actually any working "firearm" parts
Good review. I want a 1903
Good video! I'd like to point out one thing though. Don't play with an old rifle in the house with live ammo in the gun. You may forget if you have chambered one.
+Vaga Bond those were not live rounds. I epoxed 308 heads into them
The stripper clips originally were purchased from Mauser because, (1) The base dimensions are near identical and, (2) The price was right. Springfield bought many millions before they began making their own.
I have 2, and on mine, the safety is . All the way to the left= fire . Straight up = safe. To the right = locked. When locked, the bolt and trigger are locked. In safe only the trigger is, and the bolt can be worked.
You said “ how to buy “ not “the difference is”. What kinda cost are they ?
I enlarged the peep hole on my 03 Springfield and seeing the front sight was so much easier to pick up and find the target. As far as using in battle my preference had I been a soldier back then in combat, I think the 03 springfield regular sight would have been easier to acquire a target than trying to find the target in the peep of the A3. Just my thought.
The trick for using the M1903A1 for general military/field use would be to use the battlesight zero notch. That's how the Army and Marine Corps used to instruct their infantrymen, i.e., if the target was inside 250-300 yards, just use the BSZ notch and hold under as needed. The other parts of the sights are for specific uses, but take longer to deploy. Most BSZ notches come out around ~ 545 yards, which would mean about a 12" hold under at 100 yards, for example.
545 yards is a long ways off, but back when this rifle and its sights were designed, the memory of long-distance rifle fights like the Battle of San Juan Hill in Cuba in 1898, and Spoin Kop in South Africa in 1900, led military planners to believe that in the future, most rifle engagements would be at fairly long range. Of course, World War One changed that perception somewhat, but by then the rifle/sights were in use, and would remain in use until the late 1930s and into WWII. Finally, when the M1903A3 came out, it utilized a much simpler ramp-style rear sight graduated to 800 yards maximum. Call me crazy, but I actually prefer the M1906 sights found on those early Springfields.....
@@GeorgiaBoy1961 you're spot on with your knowledge. When I would take my 03 to the range I was shooting at a black silhouette target. My POA was the 6 oclock of the target which if it were a live human target my POA would be his belly button lol. My POI would always be center of the chest and that's pretty much a kill shot in any war. Thanks for sharing that info.
@@easttexan2933 - Yeah, you bet. Happy to meet another '03 fan! I'll never forget taking the very first M1903 I ever owned - a 1903A3 with two-groove barrel - to the range to test her out, some years ago. Had a great time and everything, but she did kick a bit with that steel buttplate. Got home and went to take a shower and I noticed my whole right-side (my shooting side) shoulder area was bruised a variety of yellow, blue, green, and other pretty colors! Toughen up, butter-cup! LOL! Those men back then were tough sons-of-guns, weren't they?? Bet they didn't bitch about stuff like that!
@@GeorgiaBoy1961 something tells me that a doughboy cranking out 100-300 rounds non stop against a German advance across open ground is certainly not worried about bruising. And he certainly isn't trying to acquire a target in the peep lol. Watched a movie last night called ' All Quiet on the Western Front '. You know as well as I that was an absolute terrible war and the conditions under which they fought was even more terrible. It's on Netflix. Highly recommend. I'm 76 and up until about 10 years ago I had acquired a rather nice collection of WWI and WWII rifles. I got remarried 10 years ago and life has taken us in a different direction (which I fully endorsed because I've never been happier) and I started selling off my collection. I had Remington, Eddystone, and Winchester Model 1917's, 03's 03A3's, 3 different makes of Garands, M1 carbines, several different makes of models of Enfields, Swedish Mausers, almost every wartime code of K98's, several matching numbers. All these were acquired many years ago when they weren't so dang expensive. Garands could still be had for $4-500. Nagant 91/30 for $60. Anyway, I lost interest and now all I have is a Remington 1100 that my son used to kill his first deer, a converted Model 96 Swede to a gorgeous hunting rifle, a JC Higgins Model 51 30-06, and Marlin 336XLR 30-30, and a Ruger 10/22 and a Ruger SR22. Don't miss it but just a little lol.
@@easttexan2933 - Well, good on you for getting while the gettin' was good, as they say down home....I wish I'd been around in those days of cheap muscle cars, cheap gas, and cheaper mil-surps! Well, I was - but I was just a boy in the 1960s. You are 15 years older than I am. "All's Quiet on the Western Front" is a classic novel of that war from 1929, and so is the 1930 film. I actually found the remake starring Ernest Borgnine and Richard Thomas to be rather good, that was from 1979. There's a 2022 version, too, but I don't know anything about it and haven't seen it (if it is even out yet). Those eighteen-nineteen year old doughboys firing on enemy troops had other things on their minds than sore shoulders... that would come later, if at all. You heal fast when you are that age. Thanks for writing....
Bought one off a friend years ago who was hard up for cash. Mint condition best 100.00 bucks and an old .22 I ever spent.
Just put a deposit on a A3 O3 $449. Made 8/44 stamped on tip of barrel, owe $349... Jan 11th mine... rifle customized, Monte Carlo stock... Had to have it...
The international courts found 17 mauser patents were stolen but we did quit paying royalties at the start of WW1. They say the 98 was built to be perfectly engineered, the 1903 was built for target shooting, and the 303 was built for war.
Re: "They say the 98 was built to be perfectly engineered, the 1903 was built for target shooting, and the 303 was built for war."
Yeah, but who is "they"? It's a B.S. saying anyway. Only the Lee-Enfield fanboys believe that crap anyway.
Lee-Enfields were great rifles in the day in WWI, and just the thing the Tommies in the trenches needed at the time, but the rifle was obsolete by WWII. Strangely, even after seeing the Americans, their allies, use semi-automatic rifles throughout the war, the British MOD still clung to bolt-actions, and gave the army the No. 5 Mk. I, a.k.a. the Jungle Carbine, which saw action in the Malayan Emergency. They were plagued by reports of wandering zeros, but maybe the British soldier finally figured out that they needed a self-loading rifle for a change, hence the SLR or FAL.
The .303 cartridge is powerful-enough for war, and much hunting besides, but it is a pain in the neck due to its rim. It would have been better to be a rimless design, and then there would have been no real need for .308/7.62 NATO, since the .303 makes 90-95 % the power of the short-action .308-caliber cartridge.
The Lee-Enfield bolt-action itself is rightly known as the fastest-cycling bolt-action to have seen military use, but it acquired that speed at the expense of some other desired attributes in a rifle, including strength and rigidity. The LE action has never been used by any modern hunting rifle manufacturer, to my knowledge, as the basis for any new production due to the inherent relative weakness of the LE receiver and bolt, which simply are not as strong as the Mauser design. This is why you seldom see LE mil-surp rifles sporterized and converted to more powerful calibers or cartridges; it isn't safe to do this with one, like it is with a German Mauser, or a M1917 or M1903 or even an Arisaka (these had the strongest actions of all bolt-action rifles, according to tests done post-war by P.O. Ackley, the American gunsmith of some renown.
In short, the L-E bolt gun was an evolutionary dead-end as a design.
Anyone who claims the Springfield M1903 is inadequate in any way or lacking as a combat rifle, doesn't know the subject matter well-enough to comment. U.S. Marines used M1903 Springfields in 1918 at the Battles of Cateau Thierry and Belleau Wood, to pick off German landsers (infantry) advancing through the French wheat fields, at distances of up to 800 yards, using nothing more than iron sights and good Marine fundamentals of marksmanship. Astonished French onlookers exclaimed that they had never seen such proficient long-range combat marksmanship.
And don't even get me started about how much better as a cartridge is the 30-06, than the 303.
What do you think about the Remington 19 0 3