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06-08-2018 11:39 AM
# ADS
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Proof marks can be in any place on the bolt, and are often feint & difficult to spot. Quite often with Italian
proofs the bolt is missed.
German
proofs can be very discrete or hideously large.
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Hi Simon
So if the Italians don't proof mark their bolts how are they then sold in the uk without a mark?
Regards Chubbs
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Contributing Member
Providing the rifle is marked and its recorded as going through proof I wouldn't sweat it
Does it have a very faint proof marking at the base of the handle at the top, or underneath the handle on the flat.
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Advisory Panel
Does the bolt match? Apparently when these rifles were sold off by the Italian
authorities the bolts were dumped in a bin together and the rifles came separately, requiring a protracted process of sorting them out and matching them to their original rifles where possible. The Italian dealer had photos of this process on their website for a long time, and maybe still does?
Would Italian law require military weapons provided by NATO to be reproofed before service or before resale? Obviously they were proofed when manufactured originally.
Perhaps the bolt in your rifle is not the original?
Giove can perhaps tell us more?
Last edited by Surpmil; 06-09-2018 at 10:51 AM.
“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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Hi Guys
Mrclark 303 No proof mark anywhere and have been told it has not been through a uk proofing house.
Surpmil Bolt not original and has been matched to rifle with the receiver being renumbered. Even if the serial no's where matching it should still have a proof mark for the uk civilian market.
Anyone else in the UK
not have a proofing mark on their Lee Enfield bolts ?
Regards Chubbs
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Thank You to Chubbs For This Useful Post:
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Contributing Member
The mark on my Austrian proofed No5 is tiny and very indistinct right at the top of the bolt handle. I had to stare at with a magnifying glass before I worked out what it was!
.303, helping Englishmen express their feelings since 1889
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Advisory Panel
I seem to remember that we had another case like this recently, and if my brain cells have recorded it correctly, a replacement bolt must be renumbered to match the receiver, which Peter Laidler
has told us often enough is the "master" component. Renumbering a receiver to match a bolt smacks of illegitimate Bubbary.
Changing the number on the receiver makes it a different rifle for proof and licensing purposes, i.e. a new proof becomes mandatory.
So receiver number altered + no proof mark = very, very dodgy.
Last edited by Patrick Chadwick; 06-09-2018 at 01:48 PM.
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Thank You to Patrick Chadwick For This Useful Post:
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Thank You to Giove For This Useful Post:
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Originally Posted by
giove
Italy (as well as the
United Kingdom
,
Belgium
, France, Spain,
Germany
,
Austria
, etc.) applies the decisions of the C.I.P. (Standind Commission on the Proof of Portable Firearms - Commission Internationale Permanente), based in Rue Fond des Tawes, 45 - Liege (Belgium).
After passing the proof test, on the rifles (rifled barrel) the marks are punched on the barrel and on the action or on the bolt.
In Italy the "Bench of National Proof (B.N.P.) punched the rifles on the Barrel and on the Action (receiver).
Light weapons proof tested and punched in a State member of the CIP convention can be sold to any other member State.
Hi Glove
Thank you for your information. I have as you say the marks on the receiver and barrel but not on the bolt. I have contacted the Birmingham proof house and they say that there should be one on the bolt. Which is now confusing as I am sure you are right and we must have a reciprocal agreement with Italian
guns. (Didn't have your info when I phoned them.)
The only question which puzzles me is why there are different standards within a international agreement with the uk seemingly inssisting on having an extra mark.
Regards Chubbs
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