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my first .22 british trainer.
I acquired this in 1964. Still don't know what it is. any input?
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04-18-2013 10:02 AM
# ADS
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Yep! Its a lee Enfield, Sht .22 II. It was converted from a MkII Lee Metford (Long Lee) in 1912 as part of a contract for the Royal Navy that saw 1000 .22cal rimfire trainers made.
It looks to be in very nice condition too. The magazine would not belong as they were left off this model. After it had become obsolete, other models has an empty mag case fitted to act as a brass catcher, that magazine looks like it was drilled for a cutaway rifle....
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The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to Son For This Useful Post:
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thanks, I will remove the magazine. The side hole made no logic. Now here is my trainer number two. FTR 1954. I need more input..
Last edited by arado; 04-18-2013 at 10:36 AM.
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Advisory Panel
This one was converted from a BSA Sht LE MkIII (unsure if III* from pics) prior to 1926. This .22 trainer pattern was to be the last for the No1 rifles, and became the Rifle No2 MkIV from 1926 onwards...and were still being converted in Australia
to this pattern into the 1950's.
Would like to see the FTR markings, I would have to do some checking, not sure the trainers were FTR'd... maybe someone else will know for sure.
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here are the requested pictures. it is so easy to do now.
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Originally Posted by
Son
Yep! Its a lee Enfield, Sht .22 II. It was converted from a MkII Lee Metford (Long Lee) in 1912 as part of a contract for the Royal Navy that saw 1000 .22cal rimfire trainers made.
It looks to be in very nice condition too. The magazine would not belong as they were left off this model. After it had become obsolete, other models has an empty mag case fitted to act as a brass catcher, that magazine looks like it was drilled for a cutaway rifle....
The hole in magazine was done at conversion IMHO to allow the feel of a normal rifle while not collecting brass. it fell out when handed from recruit to recruit during use.
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Advisory Panel
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No correction. just an idea. The rifle still has it's long range sights, original barrel, bolt, rear sight and wood. what was changed is a .22 tube insert and bolt head. The magazine is difficult to remove and has no distinguishing markings and the cases came out when I handled and fired the rifle. Did you check the FTR on my other trainer? opinion? Gary.
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Advisory Panel
I did. It's marked in a way I hadn't seen before, but then I am not right up on any rebuilds BSA might have done for the MOD late in WW2 or even post WW2. I was hoping one of the resident Englishmen would be able to shed a little light on it. When I get a chance I'll wade through a couple of books, see if there's anything I have missed when reading on the subject.
In the meantime, keep the pics coming, mate. Enjoying the trainers!
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So far as I am aware, the UK
Ministry of Supply (MoS) did not award any contracts to the privately owned BSA company for post war FTR work. BSA only undertook their own contract work for foreign governments. The Government/MoS were desperately trying to keep their OWN factories busy.
BSA FTR marks are a dead cert mark that the weapon was in Foreign hands (or certainly destined for) by the time it was FTR'd
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