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1918 NFR No.1 Mk III Enfield
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11-02-2011 07:58 PM
# ADS
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Bolt and barrel (barrel in 1937, as you surmised) have been replaced. Probably not at the same time, otherwise the backside of the bolt handle would be the same as the rest of the bolt. At this point it's just good that it's wearing a complete set of "clothes"!
BTW, the Indian fore stock cross screw doesn't bother me a bit. GB, Australia
, India, SA, they all had to go somewhere. Doesn't mean they spent their entire service life in one or two locales!
Last edited by jmoore; 11-03-2011 at 10:13 AM.
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Also looks like it was turned into a MkIII at some point before it took on the Indian wood. An interesting rifle.
Last edited by jrhead75; 11-03-2011 at 02:41 PM.
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Have you range tested it yet?
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Markings on the buttsocket are also handstamped in the wrong font and are somewhat misaligned. Probably at time of conversion from III* to III pattern. I'd be interested to know what is the rifle's serial number on the receiver ring. I have recently seen another Indian service Standard Small Arms manufacture SMLE III* converted to III pattern with the "*" marking cancelled with a chisel lineout, cut for magazine cutoff just like this specimen. There appears to have been a concerted effort in Indian service to convert these rifles to the earlier pattern to utilize the magazine cutoff, judging by the number of these I've examined in the past few years. There must have been some requirement for such a rifle judging by the amount of trouble someone went to to do these conversions.
Personally, I'd just leave the rifle stocked up in Indian pattern timber. Seems logical, bearing in mind the rifle's obvious provenance.