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Filled the Last of the British Enfield Type Bayonets
I'm not yet interested in one by each maker but I have sought one of each type. I believe I have completed that today.
I have the No 4's, cruciform, MK I the solid body spike, MK II, the two piece spike, MK II*, the forged spike, MK III,the No 5 carbine, the No 9 MK I and South African No 9, and now the No 7.
Is in pretty good shape but a lot of the black paint is chipped off. Does not have the "England
" stamped in the handle but "Made in UK" is stamped on the metal.
Not sure on the makers mark but there is a "P" over and "O 3" and the acceptance arrow. The "P" is not in a circle however so this probably makes it the more common Newport produced bayonet.
It is a pretty interesting bayonet and I believe it has just become one of my favorites. I always pictured these as being weak somehow with the pivoting handle but it's actually very solid.







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Last edited by Aragorn243; 09-12-2013 at 07:17 PM.
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09-12-2013 07:14 PM
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Very nice, I remember when those came into Canada
in the end of the 70's...there were red and black, large ring and small ring...what ever you wanted. All gone now...
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Poole? Very nice!How big a dent in the wallet? I have a bit of catchig up to do How about family photo. The No 7 is one of my favorites, I am amazed at the quality in design and manufacture.Keep a lookout for a black handled one.
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Carl,
I kind of limited this to WWII and I'm not too keen with finding all the different countries. One of each type is good enough for me right now. Later who knows. I already have a lot more bayonets than I planned. They multiplied very fast. I do have about half a dozen of the MK4 II's of different manufacturers. If I find one cheap, I buy it.
Hooked on History,
More than I wanted, less than it could have been $109 which makes it one of the more expensive bayonets I've purchased. I must note it did not come with the scabbard. I had that on a No 7 and quickly swapped it out. I think that's actually more than I paid for all three of the Carcano folders I have.
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The No7's were all good, firm and solid when they were new from Ordnance, 'new' rebuilt at workshops, sat on the shelf in the Armoury or on parade. But once you used them on the bayonet fighting gantry/gallery, they were crap. The shaft worked loose from the blade as it was only fixed with (I seem to remember.....) three rivets. You couldn't weld the shaft to the blade because it'd upset the temper at the critical part of the blade (although they did allow us to tig the loose rivets of the L1A1 crosspiece to the blade at that point.......). And no play was acceptable. So after a few trips into the Armourers shops to be re-rivetted, they were scrapped in large numbers, especially at the Infantry Training regimental depots. Practically, the No9 was far better but...... In fact, so said, the only good thing about them was that the now unserviceable blades made good scrapers or straight-edges for the Armourers and Carpenters shops!
When the old 34 Command Workshop closed down there were absoluitely loads of spares for these bayonets in the trays. I took a few bits and bobs - as you do and I noticed that most were marked M47, BSA. Not your usual bayonet contractors!
Just a minute......... I seem to recall doing a big spiel about the techynical aspects of these bayonets a couple of years ago, taken from the Command workshop informal work-notes. Duplicating work....., It's old age creeping up on me
Last edited by Peter Laidler; 09-13-2013 at 07:00 AM.
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I have a number of them and did some research and found the small ring No7 bayonets were for the EM2.
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Looks like you still need a No. 6 and a No. 8
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I seem to recall reading in the trials papers that the 'new' 50's pattern small ring 'No7 type' bayonet was going to be a universal issue for the EM series AND No4 rifle. That's why they made it structurally different/stronger internally. This was because the original No7 had already been codified as belonging to the Mk5 Sten Gun family - hence the B3 VAOS prefix. The fact that it FITTED the rifle was coincidence or bye the bye really. It was a STEN gun bayonet and the new small ring was going to be the universal rifle bayonet.
Indeed, the new-at-the-time SMG, the Sterling/L2 was using the old trusty reliable and well tried and tested No5 bayonet and on acceptance of the new EM rifle there'd be a new rifle bayonet across the board and the crap old style No7 bayonet would die a natural death with the Mk5 Sten gun.
I thought that this was all common knowledge - yes? No?
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Peter,
I don't know a lot about the No7's so any information is good to me. Some people call them a "jungle" bayonet and say that they fit on the No 5 but I don't see how it possibly could.
And I believe this would be a "large ring" bayonet but I didn't know there was a small ring.
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