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Early BSA Sporter Safety ...
Last edited by Nailcreek; 08-31-2014 at 04:16 PM.
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08-31-2014 04:13 PM
# ADS
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No. The bolt body on a MLE bolt is longer at the rear to accommodate the larger cocking piece with safety lever. PM me if you want a MLE bolt.
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Advisory Panel
Is there any evidence this is a factory sporter rather than a rifle assembled from parts, or put together by one of the smaller gunmakers, either in NZ
or the UK
?
The wood doesn't look like a BSA sporter IRRC and the magazine appears to be one of the Parker Hale "Made in Japan
" models, perhaps tidied up a bit and modified to clear the cutoff?
If the bolt is numbered to the rifle it is better left as-is IMHO. It MAY be a factory job after all, or the reworked remains of one. The LEC actions were commonly used for that purpose before WWI.
“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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you could always go for the tang safety like the early BSA sporting rifles
I never use the safety when hunting. I find it easier to leave the bolt handle up
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My guess is that the rifle was initially made as a sporter by BSA, later clumsily re-barreled with an SMLE barrel. There are no acceptance marks, nor a crown stamp on the receiver. I suspect that the stock in the first photos is original, as the forestock has been carved out rather coarsely to allow for the rear sight to seat. The magazine is an aftermarket conversion, probably Parker Hale, which I've replaced with an SMLE version. Here's what I've done to date:
