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Legacy Member
Pakistan Ordnance Factory
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04-20-2011 10:40 PM
# ADS
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Advisory Panel
BSA converted Mk1s to Mk2s under FTR contracts and, as they therefore had all the component dimensional specifications, its perfectly possible that they modified their production equipment to make it more suitable for export.
There is also the whole question of whether complete rifles, unfinished rifles, CKD kits and/or components were also sold to Pakistan. Some POF
-marked rifles appear to have UK
-made components in them, or even look suspiciously like BSA-made rifles - in terms of quality and finish.
A related puzzle is the provenance of "FR" marked wood that bears "P58" stamps and purports to be of Pakistan manufacture. Whilst most of this wood does appear to be from sub-continent species, about 20% (based on my own rough survey) appears to be walnut, and hence from UK origins. This, together with the puzzle of the "FR"-marked complete rifles from wartime manufacturers, indicates to me that Pakistan received large batches of rifles and components, as well as the manufacturing plant.
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Legacy Member
I can't search FR because the term is too short... so I will commit a short hijack and ask what it stands for? I stripped the wood on a maltby no4 and found FR marked on the butt.
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Advisory Panel
Last edited by Thunderbox; 04-21-2011 at 05:56 AM.
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Originally Posted by
tlvaughn
how was
POF
able to produce Mk2 rifles on the BSA machinery?
It occurs to me that the tooling changes would be relatively minor-probably possible with a cutter mod when machining the body's underside near the front side of the socket to leave more material for the fillets from which the trigger hangs. Otherwise, there's MORE material removal which could be accomplished by adding a few more work stations (machines).
1. Gang cutter for cutting the side features of the action body fillet (including the recess for the trigger).
1a. A drill and ream operation for the trigger pin added- Easily done with a fixtured gang drill (cheap!)
2. Trigger guard cut. Not requiring a dedicated machine, just a fixture for a GP mill, horizontal, vertical, or perhaps a production mill. (Also easy and cheap)
3. Change in the profiling cut on the RH side of the action body if the vestigal cut-off block is eliminated. Probably the hardest change of the lot from a production standpoint, but probably did not require a whole new machine, just cam (most likely) or cutter changes.
4. Minor changes to the inletting of the fore stock. Again, the most complex probably being the elimination of the cut-off boss recess.
Last edited by jmoore; 04-21-2011 at 05:48 AM.
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Many thanks JMoore.
My FR is on the butt. The woodowork appears to be original ( at least the forend matches the receiver ) but doesnt have a matching bolt.
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I actually saw many tons of ex Fazakerley No4 rifle plant and machinery in a dismal state of repair on a visit to the secure storeage site at a semi-underground former RAF bomb dump near Aylesbury. The dump is still in use and secure and doesn't feature on google earth. At the time the dump contained various 'missiles' so remained and still is described as ' secure'. The machinery was all identified and clearly marked as ex ROF6/Fazakerley. Most of the redundant Sterling sub machine gun production plant and machinery had been disposed of to the Sterling Company for a song.
As a matter of interest, the LAST machining feature of the No4 body was the interior of the butt socket.
You all know by now that BSA were simply sub contractors making rifles for the old Ministry of Supply, They weren't an ROF of any sort. They weren't allowed to make No4 or even No8 rifles after the completion of their contracts. However, the rascalls did make many DA prefixed No8 rifles due to a slight managerial profit making 'oversight'. After 10 years of care and maintenance the machinery was theirs to dispose of.......... which they did. To Pakistan in the 50's! After all, it was no use to anyone else.
The same restrictions and disposal regime applied to their Bren production facility too
Regarding the FR mark. Many years ago we had a little booklet that mentioned hundreds of these little foreign and common abbreviations and according to that, the FR mark was simply Factory Repair as opposed to a Factory THOROUGH Repair. The difference being that the FTR was a total rebuild to brand new using the factory gauges and specification whereas repair was repaired at the commercial factory as opposed to a Military Base Workshop. Or something similar given the 20 years or so since I've seen one. Mind you, the booklet has been proved to be wrong because it mentioned the RNG mark as Royal Government of Nepal or Royal Nepal Government due to ther fact that it has a King when we now know (? or do we.....) that it's Rhodesia and Nyasaland Govt.
Last edited by Peter Laidler; 04-22-2011 at 04:46 AM.
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Want to see a gang drill and fixture (actually, it's a drill jig in this example) in action? (as per item "1a." in Post #5)
Not an Enfield reciever, but the theory is the same. It's about 10 sec. into the film clip.
Thanks to Michael Petrov for the link:
Workers work on machinery to manufacture ordnance material in a factory in the United States
.
Last edited by jmoore; 04-21-2011 at 04:38 PM.
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Originally Posted by
tlvaughn
side by side comparison of my
POF
MK2's and ROF-F UF MK2's, I would have bet they were made on machinery from Faz.
Can you do some really detailed photos of the areas that look the same machine tool mark-wise? Might require a camera with manual controls or a super macro setting. (I don't have a digital camera that'll do it reliably.)
And then the same W/ a BSA action. Late, if possible.
Cutters get changed but usually there's enough variation in processing that some sort of conclusion might be possible.
No Pakistani No.4's on my end, so it's on you for now!
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