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Legacy Member
Interesting thought
Over at a mate's place recently and he uncased a nifty little carbine.
NOT a Lee Enfield, but a Swedish
M-94 Mauser.
The cute part was the nose-cap. It extended back under the fore-end about six inches and was adorned with a round bayonet boss below the barrel and a suitability located sword bar.
Could this have been the "inspiration" for that very distinctive feature of the SMLE series?
I did not have a camera with me that day, so I swiped the attached (hopefully) image from somewhere on the web.
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01-24-2021 06:02 PM
# ADS
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Legacy Member
That might explain the existence of other M-94 carbines with "slick" nose-caps; as noted, cavalry carbines rarely accommodated bayonets. "Artillery' carbines are a different thing in many cases.
Thus, with the SMLE being issued as a "universal" rifle, it had a bayonet from the start; the Patt '03. Cavalry types tended to carry swords for their gentlemanly pursuits. Thus, when the '07 bayonet, derived from the Japanese
Type 30 bayonet, appeared, it was designated "SWORD, bayonet, Pattern 1907".
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Contributing Member
And of course members of Rifle regiments receive the command “Fix Swords” rather than "Fix Bayonets". This originates from the sword bayonet which was fixed to the Baker Rifle.
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