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I take on board what Roger says but the trouble starts when the collector start searching for 'the right parts'. Then he fits them and re-numbers to suit and then tells everyone that it's 'original'. Well, I suppose it is........ but............
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07-18-2014 04:33 AM
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One more question for Peter if I may..
I realise quite often the armourers made do with what ever spares were available and I guess "force matched" if that is the right phrase by striking through any existing number.
But when dealing with the newer weapons where spares were more freely available did you generally get parts like bolts and barrels un numbered as new spares which would then just be stamped up when fitted & if so how quickly did supply of these items dry up.
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Force matched didn't fit into our vocabulary but accurate hand fitting did. So that's how we fitted parts. Some weapons don't have matched bolts now...., like the L85 and L86 plus others. The parts come un-numbered unless they have been used previously and have been recirculated as spare parts stocks. The L96 sniper bolts and cocking piece shrouds were often used/part used stocks. When the EMER dictated it the parts would be fitted, gauged and only then, numbered to the master number of the weapon. Barrels (except for OHF barrels) now last as long as they are accurate and not due to some gauge limit as in the past. Guns that had two barrels like the Bren and GPMG would often wear one barrel out completely while the other was OK so we'd fit two NEW barrels and put the other good one on the shelf to match it with another part worn barrel later. Then the old number would be lined out.
No4 parts were never really in short supply but the problem, if it really was a problem, is that because they were well down the order of priorities, the spare parts could take a long time to come through so you always kept a decent stock in place and these would regularly consist of part worn parts. Sometimes a rifles would be returned to ordnance as BER/written off as just a body and barrel with the remainder cannibalised for spare parts. OR the defective body/barrel would go back as a mass of unserviceable parts tied together with wire!!!!! After all, the next stop was the hot axe
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Thanks for that sir, makes interesting reading.
Must have been great having all the spares and tools to do the job :0)
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No one seems to have spotted that he got a plastic carry case as well, could this explain the price paid???
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O
WOW. I have one almost exactly like that in the same condition no scope and I paid 800 for it about 4 years ago on GB. I got one of Roger's mounts and Peter's scopes and it shoots like dream.
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Please don't flame me for adding this post but it is something I have been thinking about.
Following on what Peter said about rifles being written off... How many T's are left?
Total production of the T was about 23,187 as of April 1946.
23,187 - 1200 L42A1 conversions = 21,987
Now the pure speculation part:
21,987 - 20% WWII attrition rate (-4397)
17,587 - after WWII attrition rate of say 5% from '46 to '66 - 879
Total left 16,507 - now the bubba effect takes place which IMHO is more destructive than anything previously. Following the 80/20 rule ( 20 percent do all the work and the other 80 percent are useless) Say the 80 %of bubba's sporterize, abuse and neglect and destroy the T's they get their hands on would mean that 13205 had their transport case thrown out, rifle destroyed through neglect, conversion to a deer hunting rifle and accidental destruction. Also throw in there the gov't confiscation and destruction of the rifles in U.K, Australia
and and I believe Canada
did so as well? The remaining rifles still with original scope, mount, rifle, transport case and scope case could be about 3321world wide? And I am just guessing about 10,000 mismatched scope to rifle, rifle with scope missing and the "Less T's" still out there.
This is just a hypothesis with no actual facts to back up this guessamate based on my life's observations. I know there are a lot if holes and assumptions. This is only posted as a conversation starter. Anyone else ever think about how many T's may still exist? What is your hypothesis?
Last edited by corco; 07-18-2014 at 11:27 PM.
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Contributing Member
Corco, there is one number of which I am certain: more than 21,987 people are quite confident that they own an original No4(T)...
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