I understand the part about not buying ammo over 172 gr. But how do you know if the ammo you are purchasing is less than 50,000 CUP?The CMP advises to not use .30/06 ammunition in M1 Garands, 1903s, and 1903A3s that is loaded beyond 50,000 CUP and has a bullet weight more than 172-174gr.
GCA article exerpts on Garands and ammo.
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I understand the part about not buying ammo over 172 gr. But how do you know if the ammo you are purchasing is less than 50,000 CUP?
Excellent and informative post. The Schuster plug was developed not to protect the op rod, but for the service marksmanship teams to tune the gas vent so that the Garands would function with loads using heavier bullets for longer distances. There is also a plug made for the M1A.I think I owe you an apology, friend. Your images here from the article caused me to go down something of a rabbit hole, where I also found this post/article - which appears pretty exhaustive on actual testing of the subject.
From what you posted, and this article I'm sharing, it seems this issue of non "Garand safe" ammo causing bent op-rods is yet again another piece of Fuddlore. As you said. It is absolutely astounding how powerful that crap becomes engrained and endemic in the shooting culture. And once "everybody knows", it's just God's truth until beaten to death with excessive volumes of science and public ridicule.
Here's the link: https://www.m14forum.com/threads/commercial-ammo-in-the-garand-test-results.542477/
Short version: they pretty much tested/shot all the ammo they could find, and found zero problems with the op-rod. It might still be advisable to get that plug, avoid heavier bullets, etc, but as far as I'm concerned, at this point, the science says it's a non-issue. Thanks for sharing what you did.
Very interesting! I found this great website that gives a wonderful and detailed explanation of the operation of the M1 Garand, with pictures and graphs; https://m1-garand-rifle.com/gas-pressure.html#google_vignetteOP, this is the load data for dozens and dozens of loads the engineers fired out of Garands in the testing article I posted a link to above, including chamber pressures. It's extremely interesting: