All the Lee Enfields are marked with a date -- that will tell you if they were war issue. All
Canadian
and American Enfields were made only during the war. A few of the
British
models were made after the war, but are clearly marked with post war dates.
To be sure its a good shooter, be sure the barrel is not worn out, bent, or bulged. Either have a gunsmith check the wear, or you can use a bullet in the muzzle to see if at least 3/16ths of an inch is exposed (Captain
Laidler
is wincing, maybe screaming, and definitely chastising me for even thinking this way -- he says a barrel gauge is the ONLY way -- but most of us don't own barrel gauges -- sorry Peter, I don't mean to get your dander up, not really).
The reason I like the FR & FTR guns is because an Armourer, at the end of the war, determined all the parts in the gun had 80% life span left. Some of these FR & FTR guns were used in the Korean and Middle Eastern conflicts and got pretty banged up, but many just sat in a warehouse; you can usually tell by the wear on the stocks and metalwork. Be selective.
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Good luck on your deployment. (Did that a few times myself in a former life).