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Heres a really bad cell pic.the rest of the gun looks pretty much the same as the ppic.beat up good.thinking on a new stock and reblue,as long as it doesnt ruin any sort of historical value.I dont mind it how it is now,just thinking it might be fun to do a restoration.
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08-05-2013 09:19 PM
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Replacing the stock and bluing the metal would certainly affect it's historical value. I don't think it looks bad at all. Disassembly and inspection is a good idea but I wouldn't do any refinishing other than a light cleaning.
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I agree with Steve. There's just something about a rifle that's been there, done that, got the T shirt. Just something undefinable...... Call it character.
I used to see really battered up old No5's, Savage shotguns and L1A1 that'd come through the big workshops during these repair programmes and wondered where they'd been and what they'd done to get like that. A lot of the L1A1's had come from S-Vn and no matter how well they'd been looked after, you'd never stop the rain and rust. But they'd been there!
Just care for it with a bit of oil.... Gun and linseed oil
that is
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The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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Originally Posted by
ssj
*3**** says BSA Shirley in my book, so it should also be marked M47C? Whats the date on the barrel and does it have BSA markings on the barrel?
So is Shirley a place or something?
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Hi,
Yes, sorry, Im from the UK so I kind of forget that others are not. Northern England
was/is the industrial heartland of the UK, something like Detroit / Great Lakes area I suppose. So Birmingham = Detroit
Birmingham Small Arms Company - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Birmingham Gun Museum Website
BSA guns were supposed to be better quality....synonymous is the word that jumps to mind. Here in NZ
they seem to be at a higher asking price, 10% more seems usual. When I was a kid having a BSA was the bees knees, so I certianly intend to add one to my gun safe when I see a tidy original one.
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Whether a BSA Shirley rifle really is of a higher quality than the others really depends on who you talk to. They ALL had to conform to the same set of gauges so........ As an Armourer who's handles and worked on thousands(?) of them, I can tell you, from my experience, that there were good and bad among them all. Just like MG cars. Some with a finish that looked like they'd been sent to the USA
by deck cargo on a submarine, others were pristine examples. Most of mine looked like thay's gone there AND BACK via deck cargo!
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A great load I use is a Sierra 180gr Pro Hinter bullet(flat based soft point spitzer) over 38 grains of IMR 4895 with a COAL of 3.05". It shoots very well out of all of my No1 and No4s.
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8><--- Some with a finish that looked like they'd been sent to the USA by deck cargo on a submarine, others were pristine examples. Most of mine looked like thay's gone there AND BACK via deck cargo!
LOL, one trip we did across the Pacific we hit a bad storm. There was a very expensive car as deck cargo (silly sod), it wasnt expensive when we docked....or at least it needed expensive repairs, the waves had flattened the panels, caved the roof in....it was 2 tone as well, black and uh rust. Why he hadnt containerised it I'll never know, cheap *** I suppose. Nuc subs, 500ft down, smooth as, no sea sickness great way to ride out winter north Atlantic storms. See naff all of course but not much to see in a 20000tonner in Winter north atlantic on the surfaace anyway....rain, waves, more rain, bigger waves....puke....
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Nother quick Q.My failing eyesight sees the word tons with some other words around it.I just cant make out what it says.any ideas?is this the importer stamp?
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On the barrel? yes its a proof pass mark so the guns safe to sell, 18.5t is typical I think. Others can correct me but I think its marked like this in the UK
when it was sold off out of service, its the civilian proof mark I think. So you gun has traveled the Atlantic there and back. Pity we'll never know what its seen.