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Legacy Member
Armourers Tool ID needed 3.
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03-20-2016 04:33 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
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Jay Currah has a couple of web pages showing Armourer's Tools...
Armourer's Tools Page 1
Armourer's Tools Page 2
Regards,
Doug
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Advisory Panel
Do you know roughly what era these tools are from? What are the dimensions?
“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
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I am not sure, was told possibly WW2 from the guy I got it off. I will take a pic with a scale next and post.
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Looks like a jig that fits into the rear of a SMLE fore stock, possibly to hold it in a vice? How big is it though?
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Legacy Member
Wild stab in the dark:
Could it be a clamp for use in repairing the drawers in a fore-end?
No sign of "official" markings, thus is most likely made by the armourer himself or one of the other "artificers" to be found in a decent military workshop.
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
mike1967
Looks like a jig that fits into the rear of a SMLE fore stock, possibly to hold it in a vice? How big is it though?
Thanks
Mike1967, I have tried out your theory and it fits perfectly. At a guess, this would change the fore wood from horizontal plane to the vertical plane, possibly for when repairing the drawers on the fore wood when been held in a vice.
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Thank You to Bathurst72 For This Useful Post:
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The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to Bathurst72 For This Useful Post:
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Er......... That specially shaped piece that you have got sticking out of the rear......... Surely that should be fitted INSIDE the trigger guard opening, facing forwards. I.e; facing forwards and upside down. It looks like it's rounded at the corners to fit inside the trigger guard. Additionally, I doube VERY much that the bit sticking out the end would be sufficient to hold a fore-end in a vice for more than, say, a minute!
We had a special drift for this called a drift, Armourers No1........ or something like that
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Legacy Member
Hi Peter, got me thinking and looking at the tool a bit harder and I think I have worked it out. I pushed the tool hard up into the end of the fore wood first. On the face of the block on the outside, its at an angle. I then looked at this bit a little harder, and I noticed some markings (chisel marks), only about 1/16 - 1/32 on the outside edge of this angle. The top leading edge fits exactly to the rear edge of the brass recoil blocks.
So this tool has to be for the repairs of the drawers. It is a guide for chiseling out the correct position and angle for the recoil blocks.
Er......... That specially shaped piece that you have got sticking out of the rear......... Surely that should be fitted INSIDE the trigger guard opening, facing forwards. I.e; facing forwards and upside down. It looks like it's rounded at the corners to fit inside the trigger guard. Additionally, I doube VERY much that the bit sticking out the end would be sufficient to hold a fore-end in a vice for more than, say, a minute!
We had a special drift for this called a drift, Armourers No1........ or something like that
Last edited by Bathurst72; 03-22-2016 at 06:52 AM.
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