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Enfield Enforcer - Update
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The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to Alan de Enfield For This Useful Post:
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11-10-2009 05:47 AM
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Thanks for that Al - nice one - they're hard to find these days> I think two's just being greedy!
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
PrinzEugen
Thanks for that Al - nice one - they're hard to find these days> I think two's just being greedy!

If I remember correctly you turned down 483 as the reticule was upside down etc.
I looked at the reticlue on 134 and saw it just needed turning around (internally) and bobs-your-uncle. The cross hair on 483 had become detached from the reticule in shipping but the seller had a spare reticule (the same type 2) which he sent me FOC cannot say fairer than that !!!
Added a PH5E/4 (that I happened to have lying about) and its complete.
Had it out again tonight and shot sub 1" groups so subject to weather its off to the range on Saturday.
For the price - a bargain.
A bit of turps substitute and 0000 wire wool, to get the greasy marks off, loads of BLO
and it'll be as good as new.
The 'Enforcer clone' I built is now up for sale (less the PH5E/4). I may strip it down as the various bits (bipod, magazine, PH mounts, PH rings, scope, butt, forend and handguard etc will undoubtably fetch more on flea-bay than the complete rifle would sell for to a dealer.
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Contributing Member
Hi Alan,
you made a good catch ! Fine rifles.
Regards
Gunner
Regards Ulrich
Nothing is impossible until you've tried it !
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FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Hi Alan!
My Enforcer is nearly finished all "correct" parts now found, i will mail you some pictures when i refinish the woodwork.
Neal
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I have a problem with the engineering of the sight mountings of these rifles or indeed, ANY rifle where the front sight base is screwed into a 4mm thickness of breeching up ring. I keep thinking of my engineering physics lessons - you remember them, the total clock and anti-clockwise rotational moments and all that. I wonder just how substantial the front mounting pad grip on the body can possibly be, being retained in place with 4 or 6BA screws threaded into a base of 4mm or so.
The recoil forces and rearwards rotating forces on the telescope must be substantial. (In fact, I could work them out mathematically if I had the weight of the telescope...) I remember that even with the old No32 on the No4 and L42 could and would rotate under torque and shear off the locating spigot on the front rifle pad. In fact we had a repair policy formulated for them.
These are my views. Any comments asto the mechanical sustainability of these front pads.
As for their strength when used in the sniping role, being battered and bruised during a long stalk across Salisbury Plain..............
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Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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You can't imagine how much better I feel right now! I'd surely rather the authority confirm my engineering reservations.
They're still an important bit of Enfield history, just...
Last edited by jmoore; 11-11-2009 at 06:02 AM.
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Alan de Enfield
If I remember correctly you turned down 483 as the reticule was upside down etc.
I looked at the reticlue on 134 and saw it just needed turning around (internally) and bobs-your-uncle. The cross hair on 483 had become detached from the reticule in shipping but the seller had a spare reticule (the same type 2) which he sent me FOC cannot say fairer than that !!!
Added a PH5E/4 (that I happened to have lying about) and its complete.
Had it out again tonight and shot sub 1" groups so subject to weather its off to the range on Saturday.
All's well that end's well then Alan - glad you're pleased with it.
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Hey, hope that I haven't upset anyone! Just my comments about the strength of the sight mounts and not the rarity or strength of the weaponry.
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Advisory Panel
The Enforcer was a commercial police marksman rifle. They spent most of their time sitting in a rack some place and not being carried over all types of terrain in a combat sniping role. I'd imagine they were quite sufficient for the odd trip to the range to check zero. Lets face it, I doubt many, (probably none), were ever used for their intended purpose.
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