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Legacy Member
No, the piling rod is a Turkish
device. The Italian
Navy (as well as the other Italian armed forces) never used this device.
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03-03-2021 11:26 AM
# ADS
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Singer B
None of the numbers match other than the barrel/receiver so this one is going to be a "shooter" and if I find a nicer one down the road, a trade-in. !
If the bolt doesn't match then it came from another rifle.
Bolts are not interchangable so it would be advisable to check that the locking lugs fit properly against the locking lugs on the rifle body.
If they don't you could have problems, its not impossible to resolve it but it will take some work.
Just post again if you need guidance as how to mate (properly) a bolt to a rifle.
Mine are not the best, but they are not too bad. I can think of lots of Enfields I'd rather have but instead of constantly striving for more, sometimes it's good to be satisfied with what one has...
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Contributing Member

Originally Posted by
Alan de Enfield
If the bolt doesn't match then it came from another rifle.
Bolts are not interchangable so it would be advisable to check that the locking lugs fit properly against the locking lugs on the rifle body.
If they don't you could have problems, its not impossible to resolve it but it will take some work.
Just post again if you need guidance as how to mate (properly) a bolt to a rifle.
Thanks! I will be taking it to my gunsmith to have him check it. I'm looking forward to shooting it in a few weeks.
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Singer B
Thanks! I will be taking it to my gunsmith to have him check it. I'm looking forward to shooting it in a few weeks.
Thats a good idea, but make sure he is an Enfield smith who knows the peculiarities of the Enfield construction and how to check that the four locking lugs correctly engage.
Mine are not the best, but they are not too bad. I can think of lots of Enfields I'd rather have but instead of constantly striving for more, sometimes it's good to be satisfied with what one has...
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Legacy Member
This is a Turk stacking rod. Don't remove it! These rifles are getting rare and hard to find. It is direct provenance of where your rifle has been. Great price. Great find!!
PS, as you know, it's not a Mk 2. It's a Mk 1.

Originally Posted by
Singer B
Thank you sir! Any ideas reference the the attachment below the muzzle?
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Contributing Member

Originally Posted by
limpetmine
This is a Turk stacking rod. Don't remove it! These rifles are getting rare and hard to find. It is direct provenance of where your rifle has been. Great price. Great find!!
PS, as you know, it's not a Mk 2. It's a Mk 1.
Thanks! I have it reassembled and after a lot of cleaning and a lot of lubricant it functions correctly now. I confirmed the trigger is hanging from the trigger guard. She isn't the prettiest No 4 I have ever seen, but she has some history.
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Legacy Member
"...this attachment..." Is a stacking hook.
"...paperwork says it is a Mk II..." Look at how the trigger is connected. Trigger on a Mk I hangs off the trigger guard. A Mk II's does not.
No matter what else you should check the headspace before shooting it. You can buy($31.99 each from Brownell's. And you need the whole set) headspace gauges or rent 'em. I would not let my smithy buy them. You will pay for 'em and he will keep 'em.
Then slug the barrel. Not all of 'em are .311".
Spelling and Grammar count!
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Sunray
No matter what else you should check the headspace before shooting it.
Several generations of American shooters (and perhaps some Canadians, too) have been convinced by bad information that something mysterious and scary called "headspace" should be checked and re-checked on almost any surplus rifle, especially Lee-Enfields. The truth is less interesting but still worth knowing.
Stripped to its essentials, with a rimmed cartridge like the .303, headspace is simply the distance between the front of the bolt and the back of the barrel. It's the space where the "head" (rim) of the cartridge fits when the rifle is loaded.
Since there has to be some room to allow for varying rim thickness, the headspace is normally a bit more than necessary - giving what I call "head clearance", a little extra space so the bolt can close easily, even on the thickest rim allowed.
In addition, Lee-Enfields and their ammo were often made with a fair amount of space for dirt, mud, snow and other battlefield debris between the chamber and the cartridge's body and shoulder ("Body/shoulder clearance"). Since the cartridge is controlled by its rim, this clearance doesn't do any harm (except to handloaders who insist on full-length sizing).
When a full-power .303 cartridge is fired, a whole string of events occurs.
1. The firing pin shoves the case forward, rim against the breech.
2. The primer detonates. If it's not heavily crimped in place, it backs out, shoving the bolt and barrel as far apart as it can.
3. The thin, forward part of the case expands to fill and grip the chamber while the bullet moves out of the case and down the barrel.
4. The solid case head can't expand and grip the chamber, so it moves rearward, re-seating the primer, stretching the case walls just forward of the head, and stopping when it hits the bolt face. (In rear-locking actions like the Lee, the bolt and receiver also compress/stretch to add a little more movement. The higher the pressure, the more they move.)
5. If (and only if) the amount of head movement exceeds the elastic limits of the case, the cartridge separates into two pieces.
New cartridge cases can normally stretch a lot before breaking. Even with a minimum rim .054" thick and maximum "field" headspace of .074", the resultant .020" head clearance is well within the limits of new brass and it's very unlikely a new case will separate even if the headspace is somewhat more than the field maximum (which is pretty rare).
OK, but if one does separate I'm in deep trouble, right? Not really. It seems the short "cup" left behind the break is pretty good at keeping most of the gas where it belongs. Here's a demonstration -
First I took a case that had been reloaded with heavy loads enough times so it was stretched near breaking.
I loaded it with a 180-grain bullet and 40 grains of 4895 - a reasonably stiff charge about 2 grains under "maximum" - and fired it in a much-abused Savage No.4 with a clean sheet of typing paper wrapped around the receiver.
When I opened the bolt, the separated head extracted. (The front piece of the case fell out when I happened to turn the rifle muzzle-up while removing the paper.)
The sooty paper shows where some gas escaped. No rips or holes, just a little soot - and only where the bolt meets the barrel. Had I been shooting from the shoulder and wearing glasses, I probably wouldn't have noticed the leak at all.
The point of all this is that excess headspace, even a bit beyond normal limits, isn't the terrible danger we've heard so much about. It's not a good thing for consistent ignition or long case life (although handloaders who neck-size or adjust F.L. dies carefully can control this) - but it's not a disaster waiting to happen.
Unless you're consistently getting broken cases when firing new ammo or brass, there's not much reason to be worried about headspace in these sturdy old Lee-Enfields. Relax and enjoy!
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