I recently acquired a very nice 1915 Enfield Mk III, s/n O90XX which seems to have been converted to the MkIII* configuration. The volley sights are gone and in fact , the forend shows no evidence of ever having them, telling me that the furniture was replaced. The forend has the s/n, however. The receiver has the slot for the mag cutoff but the cutoff itself is gone. My questions are these: Are there any markings which would indicate the conversion, much like the conversion markings on the No.4. Second, there appears to have been a screw transversely through the forend about 1" forward of the barrel knox form that again, seems to have been removed and repaired. It's too far back to be the "dreaded Ishapore screw" and I've seen it before on older No. 1's but never paid too much attention since No. 4's are more my addiction. What is it? Should I attempt to restore this old girl to a MkIII config or is that just a denial of history ( I think I know the answer to that one). It really is a beautiful old rifle with markings galore and a stock that was spit at one time and arsenal repaired complete with brass pins. The woodworking is truly to be admired. There are inspector's marks and proof marks almost everywhere you look and she shoots pretty damn good. I'm very proud to give her a home.
TerryInformation
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