Originally Posted by
Brian Dick
I have to respectfully disagree with Mack. First off, they weren't that cheap at the time for the average working man. Ridolpho's post does the math on that! One thing that gets forgotten is that many of the rifles that were surplused prior to becoming obsolete in British and Commonwealth service were out of specification and had failed some aspect of basic inspection. Not all but many. The best No.4 service rifles ever surplused came straight from Donnington in the late 1980's. Of course we all know about the new in the wrap No.4Mk.2's from RAF stores that are often mislabeled as "Irish Contract". I was buying No.4's from Interarms, 20 at a time, (all I could afford!), and there was quite a variety including unaltered WWII British rifles. All in perfect serviceable condition. The gauges don't lie. Most of the rifles from South African war reserve stores were also quite nice. I had 400+ of those. Most were post WWII Fazakerley production but with a sprinkiing of Savage, Long Branch and WWII British rifles too. The Greek war reserve Long Branch rifles imported in the late 1990's and early 2000's were also very nice sans the handling marks in the woodwork, (the uncaring exporter in England was to blame for most of that), as were the ones from Europe. Many excellent to near new 1950 Long Branches were in that load. I got burned on some of the rifles Century Arms imported from Ankara, Turkey several years ago. I had a significant batch of Savages and many had chipped receiver rails and rust from poor storage. I guess they don't have oil or grease in Turkey. I wound up parting them out. Lets not forget all the lovely Lithgow and others from our esteemed cousins down under that were imported by Jovino's in NY and SAC in California. A gun shop in Montgomery, Alabama bought 1000 of them and I bought sold and traded with them for years. I agree the good old days have come and gone but they weren't just back in the 1950's and 60's.