More pics would be good...the original sling isn't much of a bonus.
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More pics would be good...the original sling isn't much of a bonus.
Should you have a condition such as a addictive personality my advice would be...don't start!
I'd go for it. Here I'd pay at least 700€ for a good one. Barrel?
They are very insipid by nature and it is a proven fact once you buy 1 Lee Enfield rifle you get the urge to buy more it is known to be very hard to resist even harder to cure take it you have been warned.:madsmile:
Attachment 84618Ok so I couldn't get my camera to take a picture of the bore so this is the only new pic I have.
Also I was wrong on the price. It's 400 after the fees and tax out the door.
Ok so I was able to get up to the other place and they had the other one out again and this time I had my camera with me.
Attachment 84619Attachment 84620Attachment 84621Attachment 84622Attachment 84623Attachment 84624Attachment 84625
They guy is going to get back to me about the price and I can't tell where it was made only that it was made in 1944
nice!
the bore looks like it has some pretty sharp lands and rifleing. but you might want to clean it up further.fouling and all that. then I would take a 30 calibre bore brush, wrap it with ooo steel wool and dip in some valve grinding compound, oil based, and run it through the barrel a few times . and look to see if it cleans up. just clean it up, dont make it a .577 caliber wildcat
its a nice rifle, they typically go for thst kind of money after tax and the ncis background check. typical tax on pleasure.
Don't put anything radical down the barrel. Get a good brush, or more like several and get to work. You may be surprised and it comes clean, I've seen it several times. If you stuff a .30 cal brush wrapped with something down the barrel, it may become jammed. I had that happen too. Stainless steel brush and oil...and get scrubbing. The rest of the pics aren't much use except to show us it's a full wood #4.