What is the highest number No4 Mk2 "in captivity"?
By which I mean: what is the highest/latest UF number on a No 4 Mk 2 actually owned by a forum member (i.e. NOT a number you read in a book)?
This thought was prompted by the posting "Why does my gun exist? To which the obvious answer is: so that we coud have the pleasure of shooting new Enfields half a century later!
I have an UF 55A 12xxx, and I have seen a 15xxx for sale here in Germany. Who can offer more?
Patrick
[B]Wrap date MUST be post-manufacture[/B]
Thanks for that thought bradtx!
The awkward term here is "date of manufacture". If a receiver is made on Date R, then the completed rifle is test fired and approved on Date T, and the rifle is packed for dispatch on Date D - then which of these is the date of manufacture?
I do not know what the Enfield factory marking system was. There must have been something, for quality and stock control purposes. From the book on the M1917 (more popularly known as the P17) by C.S. Ferris, it is clear that any real-life factory would have a stock on hand of receivers and barrels, assembling them into complete rifles and collecting into batches as required to fulfil delivery quotas. So for M1917s the receiver numbering sequence and barrel dates do not show a perfect correlation.
From your post re: PF series rifles (I think we should avoid the "Irish contract" label as being misleading - Stratton's book shows PF numbers up into the 411xxx range) I wonder if by NIW you are referring to a date on the wrapper. I am not familiar with these wrappers, so I hope you can help me: If there is a date on the wrapper, then is it supposed to be the date of manufacture or the batch date?
Just think of automobile manufacture - the date on which your "new" car is delivered to the dealer, or the date on which is it first registered is not the date of manufacture, as a few scandals in the past have shown!
So, a date of, say, April 1955 on a wrapper containing a PF-numbered rifle does not prove that the rifle was manufactured in April 1955, but (assuming that the date is indeed the date of wrapping) that the rifle was manufactured AT THE LATEST in April 1955.
If UF55 indicates the 1955 Fazakerley production, then why would someone mark a receiver with a PF number in 1955? To confuse the inspectors or what? Sorry if that sounds a bit sarcastic, but the reality in any manufacturing process is that you do NOT hop around from one numbering series to another unless you want to totally screw up quality and stock control, batching, material ordering etc. I may well be totally wrong, but until someone produces a better answer, just think of those "new" cars that have in fact been sitting in a production park for months!
As to the numbering. I reckon the rifle from S-A-M3 must be from about the last month of production, as Stratton llist up to UF.55A34567 (and the 34567 sounds almost too neat to be true - sorry again lads, now I'm getting downright cynical).
Patrick