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No4 mk1 complete sock replacement
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02-19-2013 03:03 PM
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look what I found 238 rounds does anybody know anyhthing about it.
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One things for certain, it'll more than likely be corrosive primed so get the funnel and boiling water ready
Cheers,
Simon.
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Re. Band screws:
make sure that the screws are:-
1. NEW
2. Kosher No4 types.
If the screws are "pre-loved' and have been previously "staked", the end of the thread will be slightly bulged and will be VERY hard to get started in a new band. If well-staked in its previous band, and not removed properly, it probably destroyed the thread in the band on the way out. The proper way to remove them is to first CAREFULLY drill out the staked end of the thread, so that it hardly takes any effort to wind it out. The hole in the end of the screw is not just there for decoration, it acts as a pilot hole for both the staking and the drilling out for removal.
If you have SMLE ones mixed up in the set, they are not going to start well either, being a different thread form and pitch.
No 4 band screws have a 2 BA thread, so at worst, you might be able to chase a die over them to get them back to size. No4 and 5 rifles were built with "industry standard" BA, BSF/Whitworth threads. This made sub-contracting all the "fiddly bits" a lot easier.
No1 Mk111 etc. band screws have an "Enfield Special" 0.1875" x x33TPI thread (Enfield form): good luck finding a die for that.
P-14s are also full of "Enfield Specials".
In an ordnance system, having "weird" screw threads is not necessarily a bad thing. It certainly reduces the chance that some "enthusiast" will replace a missing fastener ($5) with some piece of sub-standard rubbish (2c) from the local bargain shop.
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...screws for the bands won't screw in...
If the threads all look good I can think of two possibilities;
1. The hollow end of the screw was expanded with a punch to lock it in place the last time it was assembled. Can be difficult to re-use.
2. Wrong screw. The threads on No.4 band screws are a bit different than those on a SMLE. A no.4 (flat headed) screw will usually work on a SMLE band but a SMLE (slightly domed head) screw usually won't thread into a No.4 band.
Hope this helps.
* And Bruce types much faster than I do!
Last edited by Steve H. in N.Y.; 02-19-2013 at 07:16 PM.
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Okay thanks alot for the info. Has anyone found help from local gun shop by taking the band down to them to fit a screw in it. also all the screws and band came from same place Liberty tree. thanks. no comments on the stock
must need more work
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If she shoots as good as she looks you are in buisness.
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Originally Posted by
mgarrno4
Okay thanks alot for the info. Has anyone found help from local gun shop by taking the band down to them to fit a screw in it. also all the screws and band came from same place Liberty tree. thanks. no comments on the stock

must need more work

Tell me what you think of this. I went through my drawer and found a 10/32 machine screw worked perfect. My bands must be after market ones. Bummer
---------- Post added at 08:00 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:57 PM ----------

Originally Posted by
HOOKED ON HISTORY
If she shoots as good as she looks you are in buisness.
Thank you It shoots great before the redo took awhile to get the barrel to float. will take her out to the range soon and will see how the install went.
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Originally Posted by
Simon
One things for certain, it'll more than likely be corrosive primed so get the funnel and boiling water ready
Cheers,
Simon.
I wondered about that, after reading some posts on the forum. but they are free from my sister. 238 rounds 200 reloading bullets and a set of 303 dies for birthday. Is the brass any good to reload.
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Is the brass any good to reload.
The metallic mercury released from the primer on ignition will corrupt the integrity of the brass and cause embrittlement. As the shampoo ad goes," It won't happen overnight, but it will happen." Regarding cracking: This ammo is getting old. That doesn't mean it won't go bang or be inaccurate. I have seen sixty year-old "fresh" .303 ammo come out of sealed cans with cracks starting in the brass around the neck. This usually indicates sub-standard annealing. In the "normal" course of ordnance cycles, ammo is turned over at MUCH shorter intervals than fifty or more years. Then again, when I was in a RAAF Air Cadets shooting team in the in the mid-70s, we got issued with some 1918 vintage Brit Mk7 that was superbly consistent and, from memory, suffered almost NO splits, as opposed to the "interesting" 1950s "KF" headstamped stuff that cracked AND displayed erratic grouping.
In military use, split necks would be considered "rare" because the stuff was normally shot away long before the crystalization process developed that far.
Yes, the cases can be reloaded if you can find a supply of RWS 6000, or equivalent, .250" dia. Berdan primers. These use a LEAD based priming mix. Removing the old ones can be done hydraulically or with an RCBS Lachmiller Berdan tool. You may only get one or two reloads per case as the mercury contamination from the initial firing of the brass will ensure that the cases WILL start cracking.
Another option is to use a collet tool to remove the Mk7 projectiles and reload them into some nice new and much-more-reloadable commercial brass with a suitable propellant. Seat 175gn or so softpoints in the mil cases for hunting ammo. If you lose a case bagging a nice swag of venison, that's a fair trade.
How is anybody going with sourcing Mk7 bullets?
Finally: FREE ammo is good ammo, even if you just recover the projectiles and sell the cases for scrap.
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