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Skennerton vs Stratton
I'm considering buying reference material on Enfields. Any comparative feedback out there regarding the work of these authors?
Thanks!
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06-07-2009 03:36 PM
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B52, Short answer...Skennerton
heavily researched the L-E pedigree. Lots of useful and interesting data. Stratton used previously published data and a very extensive poll of collectors to gather data.
Even shorter, Stratton's books were meant to be primers for the new collector.
Both authors printed the very best info available at the time. Through the internet collectors have made some minor corrections and made some interesting finds.
Buy Stratton first, then Skennerton.
Brad
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Skennerton
's work is THE reference. However, I have both sets!
So I can't spell, so what!!!
Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
Those who beat their swords into ploughshares, will plough for those who don't!
Be polite. Be professional. But, have a plan to kill everyone you meet.
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Originally Posted by
bradtx
B52, Short answer...
Skennerton
heavily researched the L-E pedigree. Lots of useful and interesting data. Stratton used previously published data and a very extensive poll of collectors to gather data. Brad
Would someone knowledgeable please state how many entries Stratton had in his data base? It was generated by responses to his request in the now defunct Lee Enfield Collector's Digest published out of Alaska. This was before email/ internet and everything was done by postal mail. A sample questionaire as included in one LECD issue mailing and respondents were expected to duplicate the form for each LE.
In my opinion and memory, the survey was flawed in that he expected the correspondent to know what model he had (greater knowledge than most had at the time) and made no provision for identifying conversions, unique markings or receivers with several different serial numbers.
I was suprised that he made no statistical analysis of the data but that lends support to my contention that he did not have sufficient data points to work with.
Sadly he is gone and we may never know the details. My comments are not intended to take away or disparage the service he has provided to the collecting community but rather to put things in perspective.
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Buy both. Stratton is more concise Skennerton
is more comprehensive. Both give you useful information.
Last edited by Paul S.; 06-07-2009 at 10:12 PM.
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Buy Skennerton
and skip Stratton---so to speak.
-----krinko
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Buy Skennerton
first, collect all the others later.
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The two authors' books tend to serve different purposes. Skennerton
wrote a history of the Lee-Enfield. Stratton approached the subject from a more technical viewpoint, detailing how various components changed over the years and through various models of rifle.
Both are valuable sources of info to the serious collector. I am privileged in having a signed set of Stratton's books. It is a shame he passed on before his mission was completed. He was going to incorporate all the research on Enfield threads into later editions of his work.
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I'ts easy to tell which book a new collector has read when they start refering to their rifle having "third variant sight ears" and "second variant" something else... A total load of hogwash. If they read and understood Skennerton
's work, they'd be able to read 95% of rifles from the markings and know where to find the information as to how the piece was supposed to look.
Personally I think the best reference material on the subject is the LOC. (trust the makers to know all the details...) The easiest way to understand/ find what you want in them is to go via Skennerton's books.
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Originally Posted by
Son
I'ts easy to tell which book a new collector has read when they start refering to their rifle having "third variant sight ears" and "second variant" something else... A total load of hogwash. If they read and understood
Skennerton
's work, they'd be able to read 95% of rifles from the markings and know where to find the information as to how the piece was supposed to look.
Personally I think the best reference material on the subject is the LOC. (trust the makers to know all the details...) The easiest way to understand/ find what you want in them is to go via Skennerton's books.
You make a valid point. I was suprised that the pattern room collection did not include manufacturing variations until it was explained to me that the collection was expanded based on donations from confiscated Police arms, turn ins and rifles evaluated by the services that had no further use for them. There was no stated intent to collect all manufacturing variations including rebuilds.
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