I have a Danish parts kit and a well worn Winchester receiver and I want to put them together.
I got both cheap, the kit was bought from an estate, evidently at original cost from the 90s or early 00s. I haven't cleaned out the barrel yet but I think it might be an unissued VAR barrel that was built, racked and then demilled. The receiver was also cheap because it was missing about 90% of its finish and has some fairly pronounced machining marks.
There were other more expensive receiver choices when I was buying, including some nice Italians which would have made a convincing Danish Garand but I grew up down the street from the Winchester Mystery House and I need a Winchester rifle in case of zombie apocalypse. I'm not really in to lever actions or hunting style bolt actions so the Garand is perfect.
I never looked in to Garand Building, I thought it was more involved than a FAL but looking now it seems like with a little luck my headspace will be OK and all I need is a barrel vise and receiver wrench to screw it together.
I think I will try to make a receiver wrench with an oak wood insert to protect the exposed portions of the receiver. I think I can make a simple barrel vise too. That should be far less expensive than buying.
It looks like my barrel gets hand tight about 20° from straight up so it looks like my shoulder is where it needs to be. I'm taking that as a sign that my headspace might be close.
I'm going to do more testing to measure the distance from the end of the bolt to the barrel shoulder with a go gauge in the chamber and the distance from the end of the bolt to the front of the receiver. That should tell me if my headspace will be too loose. If the headspace looks tight, I will look at mildly lapping the bolt and reaming the chamber.
One thing I need to do is disassemble the bolt. That looks like a pain. Is there an easy way?
Any way, I know my Winchester looks rough but it's a battle rifle, what's the big deal? I have seen people mention that Winchester's can command a slight price premium over a Springfield which scarcity might explain but they aren't that scarce. It seems like maybe it's just some good natured ribbing over the rough finish that Winchester's have compared to a Beretta or something.
All I know is that I expect to have a very ruggedly handsome Garand after I get it refinished and with the VAR barrel it should be a shooter too.