I have an unusual No.4 rifle. It's a 1941 Maltby and has the scope bracket mounting pads correctly mounted. By correct I mean the receiver was correctly machined to align the 2 pads with the bore ( the front pad is recessed into the receiver probably 10 to 20 mils with the correct profile to match the pad). additionally, from what I can discern from reviewing info on these boards (and Ian Skennerton/ Peter Laidler
reference book) the pads and screws are original period parts and the pads are soldered to the receiver (it also appears the solder is securing the mounting screws as well - they cannot be tightened or loosened). Is it possible this was a "trials rifle"? The receiver is marked "England
" on the top of the forward receiver (ahead of the bolt) and has 2 other acceptance stamps - one appears to be for Malaysia and the other for Indonesia. Any help on determining exactly what I have would be greatly appreciated. This rifle has been arsenal rebuilt and there are no import markings anywhere on it. It does not have the normal "T" stamping or the "TR" markings.
Thanks
JimInformation
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