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What exactly is that rifle Homer? A shortie SMLE with an aperture sight on the charger bridge? Someone did a (inconclusive.....) paper on these short rifles a year/18 months or so ago
There's an excellent article in the MKL
along with a 138 pic photo montage of Homer's rifle.
1944 No.1 Intermediate Shortened Lightened Rifle (Mfg by SAF Lithgow)
They only made 100 of these experimental rifles ...
There's also an excellent artticle by Terry Hawker... 
Shortened No. 1 Mk III* Rifle
Regards,
Doug
Last edited by Badger; 12-25-2011 at 08:02 AM.
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12-25-2011 08:00 AM
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That woman in the middle with the hat looks like she could beat the Nazis with just one good stare even before she starts berating them! She scares me already............
What is that just behind the No5 rifle........., is it a bayonet? Someone will come up with a LB No5 bayonet soon if it is!
Can anyone identify the whole row?
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Legacy Member
Great picture from SAL's Toolroom. Was it dated? My best guess on the line up;
1) Shoulder Holster Inglis (Browning) HP
2) Swift Trainer
3) LB Jungle Carbine
4) Bayonet { may be for JC }
5) LB No4 Light weight rifle (up to 50 produced...only a few in existance)
6) LB No4T MK2 REL scope
7) LB TP (Lyman Scope) with prototpye butt that was later used on the CNo67
8) LB CNo67 ( a scrace few in collections today)
9) No4 LB presentation rifle. Exhibition fiddleback walnut stock ( have only seen 2 of these. both sold for large $'s)
Tom....thanks for posting the picture.
Merry Christmas one and all,
Ron
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Bindi2
Homers rifle is an
Australian
Short and Lightened. Serial Nos XP1 to XP100. Thats not the only one i have seen in that condition.
Do you have the bayonet for it Homer.
Bindi you've seen this gun before. It belongs to your old mate Demo.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Cantom
This pic was just posted on
Canadian
Gunnutz by 6167. It's of a Dutch Royal Visit to Long Branch Arsenals during the war. Note the second rifle in line, between the Long Branch Training Rifle and the Lightweight Rifle.
Note the recoil pad...same as in my pics. It sticks out almost as far as the steel part. Not at all like the Brit version.
Also note on the LB Jungle Carbine, the mid band is the milled early round profile band, while on the Brit versions it looks to be the later flat band.
Note that in 6167's pic you can clearly see that the band is milled/round!
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...lVisitLB-1.jpg
Well, that settles that!
And the bayonet on the table under the butt can only be for it.
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same. 
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Homer
Bindi you've seen this gun before. It belongs to your old mate Demo.
That greedy bugger owns just about all the lithgows left in Australia
...... Chuckle chuckle
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Legacy Member
Re the photo at:
https://www.milsurps.com/images/impor...lVisitLB-1.jpg
The cool Canadian
J5550 carbine (one-piece stock) has yet another odd feature: TWO grooves on the left side of the fore-end.
Pity they got carried away with the lightening and buggered up the recoil transfer on that little carbine.
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The British
were reluctant to even trial the Canadian
lightened rifle because of its flimsy one piece stock. The small arms school considered the small of the butt so marginal in strength that it would/could not possibly survive its first bout of bayonet fighting at the gallows.
It was this very same weak and flimsy wrist problem (with the first Remington Lee that DID break..... - now housed at Warminster together with one of the J-5550's) that ensured the retention of the large diameter stock bolt in the first place.
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The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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I have seen two (2) of the Canadian
lightweights with stocks broken at the wrist........One in a private collection and the other in a museum. One was simply glued (from what I could see) back together and the other had a large round head bolt installed as part of the repair.
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Any reason for the breaking of the two you know about Warren? I wouldn't mind adding a note in the paperwork relating to ours of the fact that '.......two others known do have broken stocks by reason of...............' Thanks Warren
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