Springfield 1905 Wood Bayonet Grips

Item Number
GRP143
4 reviews Write a Review
$9.95
Bulk Pricing:
Buy in bulk and save

New production, new condition wood grips for the M 1905 pattern bayonet as used on the M1903 Springfield rifle. Fix up or up-grade your old bayonets with these beautiful new grips. Heavily grooved for better holding, just like some originals we found and sent to the wood workers to copy. Nut included. Ready to fit on to your blade.

4 Reviews

  • 4
    1905 Wood Bayonet Grips

    Posted by Jeff Blankinship on Jul 8th 2020

    Great set of grips. It does take a little finial fitting, but they are a good deal for the price. I recommend them.

  • 5
    These 1905 Bayonet handles are the best! They have all parts necessary for installation and fit perfectly! They work on all M1 pattern bayonets as well!

    Posted by Biloxi Bill on May 22nd 2020

    Great product for a great price!

  • 3
    Update to my previous review:

    Posted by OLD BULL on Jan 31st 2020

    In my previous review I stated: "I could not find an example of ANY M1905 wood grips with this rib/groove pattern. The two half surfaces were made on different machines with different levels of coarse and fine sanding; the grooved ribs do not line up." Well I finally found one on an original, 1906 made, Rock Island Arsenal 16" bayonet and said original is "very close" to the Sarco reproduction so I've raised the Star level to 3 only deducting for the fit of the screw and the difference in cut between the two grip halves. That being said, now a very good friend and high dollar collector wants to trade original grips for my Sarco reworked reproductions and... He KNOWS they're reproductions. Go Figure !

  • 2
    Worked after I WORKED !

    Posted by OLD on Jan 11th 2020

    PROS: Sarco is the ONLY provider of M1905 wood grips. It only took a minimum of wood removal from the straight flat at the top rear of each grip to get them to fit beautifully.
    CONS: I could not find an example of ANY M1905 wood grips with this rib/groove pattern. The two half surfaces were made on different machines with different levels of coarse and fine sanding; the grooved ribs do not line up. WORST... the screw thread and the bushing thread did not match at all. I had to find a hardened 8-32 screw in the parts bin and re-tap the bushing. OUTCOME: The new screw is TIGHT and I very slowly sanded the grips while ON the bayonet and feathered the metal and wood evenly and now I have a very beautiful set of type 1905 first edition smooth grips that I would not have if I hadn't gone thru the trouble so... "Oh CRAP" became "AWESOME !"