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    Long BranchNo 4 Mk 1* T Stamp?

    I have come across a 1942 Long Branch No4 Mk1* with a T marking that I do not know if significant, so, asking for any help in determining what it means

    It has a B19 Below The Serial Number and the T below that near the Trigger Guard Screw
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    Last edited by Tommy57; 03-18-2015 at 11:52 PM.

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    19L would make it a 1942 rifle and it looks like it went through at least one UKicon(?) FTR judging by the black paint and replaced trigger guard. The letter T does look like the T of the "TR" stamp, but there's no record of a T being put there for any reason related to sniper converstions, AFAIK.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Surpmil View Post
    19L would make it a 1942 rifle and it looks like it went through at least one UK(?) FTR judging by the black paint and replaced trigger guard. The letter T does look like the T of the "TR" stamp, but there's no record of a T being put there for any reason related to sniper converstions, AFAIK.
    Long Branch snipers do not have "TR" stamped in the manner of a Britishicon converted rifle.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lee Enfield View Post
    Long Branch snipers do not have "TR" stamped in the manner of a Britishicon converted rifle.
    I know, but the gentleman asking the question did not.

    And if you want to know why Tommy57, it's because the "TR" was used to mark rifles found to be exceptionally accurate during test firing after manufacture, whereas the Canadianicon conversions were done on batches of rifles in the same factory as they were built in, and they were built to the necessary standard from the start. Therefore requiring no such marking to ID them between manufacture and conversion in different factories at some later date, as was the case in the UK.
    Last edited by Surpmil; 03-21-2015 at 08:00 PM.
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