I could well be wrong Stanforth, so jump on me if that is the case, but I suspect your No4 is stocked up in stained birch, not walnut.
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I could well be wrong Stanforth, so jump on me if that is the case, but I suspect your No4 is stocked up in stained birch, not walnut.
The No.4 appears likely to have birch woodwork. Note heavy absorption of dark stain at end-grain area of grip and of forestock just ahead of butt socket. This would not be present with unstained wood (walnut).
Thanks for the pics. It's birch, a bog standard Savage with character!
I stand corrected.
:dunno:
The round 'button' cocking pieces were standard on No4 Trials rifles & also on early run of production rifles. If yours is later production it must just have been fitted as a replacement at some point. With the SMLE, the slab sided cocking piece was approved (IIRC) mid way through WW1, so both types are quite commonly encountered.
Hope this helps.
My apologies. I suppose it could be a late rifle that went out with an early component part that just happened to be lying around at the time, but I was speaking in the generality of things. Perhaps I should have said 'If yours is a late rifle IT IS QUITE LIKELY THAT it was fitted as a replacement part', rather than 'must' have been.
It would be nice to know what the number is though.