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Legacy Member
New acquisition! My no1 mkIII.
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Thank You to GlennP For This Useful Post:
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09-03-2017 02:38 PM
# ADS
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Legacy Member
New Acquistion
A lot of upgrading/rebuilding since manufacture, most important are the headspace and bore condition. What is the barrel date ? Look for a copy of Charles (Skip) Stratton's book Volume 1 British
Enfield Rifles
. easy to read.
Your rifle would have looked like my BSA 1909 (well used example) but still with the '09 dated barrel and nice bore
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Advisory Panel
Good looking rifle though, nice shape and all. If the bore is good too, then it's worth the cash laid out.
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Not sure on the barrel date as I haven't gotten around to taking her apart just yet, but the condition of the bore is very good. Thank you for the kind words Jim!
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Legacy Member
GlennP: As I'm sure you'll want to disassemble it at some point, be sure to study up before you do. Never attempt to remove the butt (or tighten it) until the forend is removed. Never pry the forend down from the muzzle end- it should be removed by pulling it straight down at the rear end which slides it off the draws without damaging them. You'll understand as soon as you've done it once. It would be nice if the barrel is the original but, in any case, a 1910 ER SMLE is a nice acquisition. Are you going to go backwards (in time) from there and try to find a Canadian
MLE ("Long Lee") which was the Second Boer War rifle used by Canadians.
Ridolpho
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
GlennP
Ever since marrying my
Canadian
wife I've been on the hunt to gather together a collection of Canadian service rifles.
Now there is a rationalization I have never heard ,but it appears to be a good one assuming that is your wife holding the Enfield with the lovely smile on her face.
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Contributing Member
WOW -- LUCKY ... Beautiful! yeah, the rifle too.
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
CINDERS
One last thing I see it has what appears to be a windage back sight ladder see the small graduations on the ladder at the rear of it on the top have a look at the rear sight to see if the worm screw hole is there as it should have a knurled wheel on the Rt side of the rear sight to move the very rear section to allow for wind/mirage/zeroing to a shooter.
Well, what do you know, it was adjustable! If i were to buy a replacement rear, would it be worth trying to switch out the parts or should I just swap rears and keep the original as-is, in your opinion?
This is what I found for replacement Enfield #1 MKIII Rear Sight Leaf w/Backsight, Early, Windage Adjustable, *Good to Very Good* - Enfield #1 MKIII - Lee-Enfield - Bolt Action - Rifles
Also, what you mean about the easr is that the offset ear should be on the right instead of the left side? This makes sense now with the missing knob on the right.
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Thank You to GlennP For This Useful Post:
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Contributing Member
Go with replacing with an adjustable they are out there they do cost a bit place a WTB on this site someone is bound to have a spare somewhere in the nest, in MHO it finishes the rifle off not sure on the date but think the adjustable sights were discontinued around 1916 or was that the mag cut off either way later marks of the MKIII did not have an adjustable rear sight.
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