-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Gripweed
If I may ask - based on this discussion, is this Mk3 bipod? Thank you!
Yep, thats the Canadian
Mk3 as used on the Inglis Mk2. Gripweed, Is your Mk1 a Enfield? It looks it, it also looks like a British
Mk2 barrel but I cant quite tell. Would you mind telling me the serial number?
Cheers, Chris.
-
-
05-16-2010 09:05 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Yes, its Enfield Mk.I body BB4135 (1943).
I think that barrel is british Mk2, butt slide is Mk1, body is for sure also british Mk1, but confused about bipod and butt. If the bipod in canadian one, its more mixed I expected...
Butt looks like Mk2, but what about the straight butt plate? I would expect the curved one 
And finally Mk2 piston inside...
What about the sign JI hammered on the parts? Is this mark of particular company?
-
-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Gripweed
Butt looks like Mk2, but what about the straight butt plate? I would expect the curved one
What about the sign JI hammered on the parts? Is this mark of particular company?
The butt is a Mk2. I don't think I've seen a non-curved mk2 butt plate before and I would be interested to know what it is.
The 'JI' is the mark of the John Inglis company of Toronto, Canada
. (I believe the Whirlpool company is their modern descendent) As well as complete MkI, MkI(m) and MkII Brens, I get the impression they made a lot of Bren spares - many of which are to be found reducing the originality of my 1940 Enfield MkI.
Mark
Last edited by peregrinvs; 05-16-2010 at 05:04 PM.
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
Thank you - so it proofs suggestion that bipod is canadian (Inglis) made.
-
The straight Mk2 type butt plate without the overhang is in fact the Mk3 butt plate. It's little known but was used to replace the awful overhung Mk2 butt plate. The Mk2 butt plate caused nothing but trouble to Armourers because every time the gun was put down on its butt, it punched the nose of the overhang into the wood recess that it was fitted into (along the top of the butt.....) and split it. It also bent the top butt plate screw and stripped the threaded hole too. This meant patching the butt.
The first relaxation was that the top of the wooden butt could be made off so that the top strap of the butt plate was level with the butt and not recessed into the wood. That was all well and good but it STILL knackered the screw and hole..... which needed drilling out, wood peg plugged, drilling and a new screw. Common sense prevailed and the Mk3 butt plate was introduced - as shown, and this solved the problem.
The overhung Mk2 butt plate also prevented the gun from going into the chest unless a small chamfer was cut into the right hand end to allow the overhung butt plate to squeeze the butt onto the buffer and then into the chest. Mk2 butt plates, an Armourers worst enemy........
Oooooops, minor error slipped in here! The FLAT butt plate for the Mk2 butt, as shown on Gripweeds gun is the PLATE, butt, Mk4 and NOT the Mk3 as I said.
As a matter of interest, the Mk3 butt plate was a Mk2 butt plate, modified to fit onto the lightened Mk2 butt (called the Mk3, that looked similar to a Mk4 butt.....), for the Mk4 gun. Just HOW much more confusing can it get? Anyway, for the lightweight Mk3 Bren gun, it used the Mk5 butt plate on a Mk4 butt
Got all that regarding Bren butts and butt plate configurations..... because I'll be asking questioins on it during the next lesson......
Last edited by Peter Laidler; 05-17-2010 at 04:44 AM.
Reason: Cock-up.........
-
The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post: