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Peter,
Absolutely, but I wasn't comparing a 5 with a 6, except to say that with a limited n=1 experiment my 6 doesn't seem to suffer from the No5's problem. Granted "... extra ammo, water and rations. Your only re-supply is from the air..." so the point I was making was that having a rifle with some weight shaved off, a No5 or 6, would be preferable to a No1 or 4. Every little helps, as they say. And the bayonet was that bit lighter than the 1907 pattern too.
Regards
Ian
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01-27-2016 06:36 PM
# ADS
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What will happen if you overtighten a barrel into the No4 body is that it will quickly bulge the chamber and cause hard extraction - or no extraction! This is because the 'draw'; allows the chamber part of the barrel to exceed the limits of its elasticity. That's the recipe for a bulged barrel!
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Contributing Member
Well Gil bit like Oz we have a tactical aircraft designed for aircraft carriers but no aircraft carriers perhaps our Govt's are in league!
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
villiers
I think the `wandering zero´ people mean that accuracy diminishes when the barrel heats up. So you´d need more than ten rounds.
I know the ten targets wouldn't be "discussing" my accuracy, by then I can let'er cool of and reload for the next ten lucky buggers who wish to have a word about the 303 round.
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