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Legacy Member
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08-24-2019 04:14 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
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Legacy Member
That's kind of like the one my friend got. I made a post on it. I believe consensus was it was legit.
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Contributing Member
I'll say it again here, no clean out hole. In my learnings over the years, that is a dead giveaway it is a repro. Seems such a small thing but all the known legit ones have it. All the known fakes don't. And it's incredibly easy to put one there. I did one myself years back. Other than that and the fact is has no makers marks, just like the other one, it looks real good.
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Advisory Panel
Scabbard looks like an FN scabbard. It's even still black painted for parade.
There's something about the angle of the point that's different about the #5 scabbard...
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Legacy Member
I guess the question is where are these at least old looking numbers stamped in wood No5s coming from?
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Legacy Member
According to Ian Skennerton
's book, pages 253 & 254, most commercial No5 bayonets did not have clearance holes in the pommel, although some examples had "witness marks" where the hole would have gone. It also states that wood, plastic and sheet metal grips have been observed retained by rivets or screws.
Why not take the grips off and see if the cross piece is pinned in position or welded and if there are any markings on the tang?
Last edited by Flying10uk; 08-25-2019 at 08:02 AM.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
sheet metal grips
Peter spoke of refurbing a few like that, or examining them... It would make sense if FN was in the system by then...
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Little known fact, related to me by James Edmiston a few weeks ago, that Sterling made the metal grips for their hybrid No5 bayonets. Sterling hybrids consisted of an L1A1 blade with rivetted in place No5 cross-piece and pommell. As a result of this, Enfield contracted Sterling to manufacture the L1A1 grips - which they'd copied in the first place!
We never had steel grip No5 bayonets in the Army. L:1 type, yes. No5, no.
As for the clearance hole, Sterling didn't do this unless it was specified in the contract. There's a bit more to this and I'll come back when I have spoken to James again to get the facts right..........
Scabbards were pretty cheap to make. Just .035" or so thickness 1" o/d tube, last 1.5"(?) rolled to a taper through die rollers then fed into parallel rollers, gradually stepped down until it comes out the typical scabbard shape. Braze button and that's it. So cheap that Sterling never considered in-house manufacture
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Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
Thanks for all of the thoughts and info. I had no idea that FN produced No. 5 scabbards.
I am in temporary housing, so don't have the tools needed to properly remove the grips (someone has already buggered the grip screws a bit already). I just relocated from California to Texas. My collection and most of my reference library are packed into a shipping container. I picked this up Saturday at a gun show in Ft. Worth pretty cheap. I have a marked Sterling bayonet, but couldn't compare since it is in storage with the rest. I am pretty comfortable that it is not a repro. It is a commercial Sterling variant from the period prior to institution of the "windowpane" blade marking that was actually sold and used somewhere (e.g., some third world country police force or ?).
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
marysdad
I had no idea that FN produced No. 5 scabbards.
Not quite how I meant to say it. I meant that it looked like an L1A1 bayonet scabbard as they interchange. Here we see scads of them clad in FN C1 A1 scabbards as that was what was easily available and usually in better shape physically. The pointed end is a slight different profile...says me...
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