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Legacy Member
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04-10-2023 05:38 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
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Advisory Panel
Right photo, top to bottom:
Lee Enfield, probably No. 4.
2 and 3, P'14 or US M1917.
98 Mauser.
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Thank You to tiriaq For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
Great...thank you.
I've got a No 4...so will keep that as a spare..
Thanks again
John
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Legacy Member
Well John it looks like in the side view from the top, stripped South American Mauser 98 bolt shroud, Enfield No4/No5 firing pin assembly, Enfield No3/P14-US Model 1917 cock on opening firing pin assemblies positions 2 and 3, unspecified Mauser 98 firing pin assembly.
I assume it's a South American bolt shroud because it's in the white. Markings will identify it further same with the bottom 98 firing pin.
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Contributing Member
Position #2 is a M1917 firing as it is the same size as the M1903 Springfield. Position #3 is a Pattern 1914 as the firing is significantly smaller than the M1917. Quite a number of M1917 firing pins were provided to British
ordnance and they were machined to Pattern 1914 "specifications".
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Legacy Member
I had heard that using the 'wrong' firing pin in (I think) a P14 can cause primer rupture?
Thanks again everyone..
Cheers
John
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Advisory Panel
What's the story? Someone pull the firing pins out of their rifles for "safety" reasons and then they got separated?
Point being: if so, could they be reunited?
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same. 
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Legacy Member
A friend who is downsizing his vast collection gave me a box of bits. I'm trying to work out what bits exactly ?
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Thank You to john60wales For This Useful Post: