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It's a Mk2 gas cylinder made by Climax Rock Drill at Redruth in Cornwall and still in business too. It's a press fit in the gun and notorious(?) for working loose. You'll see a single row of gas vent holes. Inglis commenced production of the Mk2 gas cylinder but carried on with the double row of gas vents. Why, nobody seems to know but I underestand Inglis changed to the far superior single row shortly afterwards, in line with Monotype - and the drawings!
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10-07-2014 05:41 AM
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Legacy Member
Thanks for the I.D., Peter!
How easy is it to find loose, un-attached, BREn gas cylinders now?? Over here......I swear I have never seen one by itself, the only "spare" ones are all installed still in torch-cut DEMIL-ed receiver chunks. Not really what I was looking for.....
Are they, of any Mark, reasonable to try and remove??
Do proper drawings still exist somewhere? Is there enough demand to try and go make a short run of any of them??
-TomH
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Legacy Member
I have a few gas cylinders, if anybody needs one.
Attachment 56785
This is the serial number of the 1942 Daimler Mk2 parts kit my friend got.
Attachment 56786
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They are fairly easy to get in the UK
. Loose Mk2 gas cylinders were tightened up by slightly over-reaming the taper pin hole a tad more and replacing the taper pin with a new one but driving it in harder. Don't confuse a loose gas cylinder with a loose gas blast plate. (that's the blast plate immediately to the rear of the cylinder shown on the bottom left cylinder in Vince's photo). As for removing a worn one, as opposed to a loose one, then they can be a real pig. Accept that it is scrap and weld a xxxxxxg great nut to it, clamp the body, get it red hot and unscrew the cylinder.
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Legacy Member
The bottom Mk1 cylinder in that photo is US, its all twisted and the top 2 have been damaged also putting them US.
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Advisory Panel
...snip.... Inglis commenced production of the Mk2 gas cylinder but carried on with the double row of gas vents. Why, nobody seems to know but I underestand Inglis changed to the far superior single row shortly afterwards, in line with Monotype - and the drawings!
So far as I'm aware, Inglis never manufactured the single row gas vent cylinder. Once Inglis completed production in 1945/46 they turned over all left over work, tooling and government paid/owned machinery to Canadian
Arsenals Limited (created from Small Arms Limited- Long Branch on Dec 31, 1945).
If you look at Dugalby's book, the .280/30 experimental calibre Bren built on a 1945 dated Inglis body shows the double vented cylinder.
I've physically looked at several 1945 dated Inglis .303 Bren MkII's and each one had a double vented cylinder.
Canadian Arsenals Limited (CAL) probably/certainly did manufacture MkII single vented gas cylinders - - I am told that the war-time dated 8mm MkI Brens show double vented cylinders, while the post-war "clandestine" 8mm Bren MkI's (manufactured/assembled by CAL) are found with single row cylinders.
Last edited by Lee Enfield; 10-08-2014 at 12:29 PM.
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