Roger,
I just lifted the dot points from our PM:
Regarding the use of Mk.VI ball, Ian and I had a chat about that as well. I have often banged on about this in the various forums (Gunboards I think), but the exclusive use of Mk.VI ball on Gallipoli by ANZAC and Britishforces is something you can bank on.
In brief points:
1. Australia made Mk.VI ball from 1906 to December 1917 at the Colonial Ammunition Factory at Footscray in Melbourne. Thereafter we commenced Mk.VII production in January 1918. That is eight years after than UK factories did.
2. UK ammo factories started producing Mk.VII ball from 1910 onwards. When they ceased making Mk.VI, I do not know, but better cartridge collections than mine may hold the answer.
3. All Lithgow rifles were sighted for Mk.VI ball from commencement of production in 1913 to sometime around the time CAC transitioned to Mk.VII ball, so probably in vicinity of 80,000 Lithgow rifles in Mk.VI
4. Australia stopped providing troops with rifles for overseas service from September 1915. They embarked the troopships without rifles and were issued new Brit made SMLEs when they arrived in the Salisbury training camps. The fact that the Australian rifles were still in Mk.VI may have been a factor in this.
5. All pre WW1 imports of SMLE Mk.III rifles were sighted in Mk.VI ball.
6. First SMLE Mk.IIIs were imported around May 1908, and include some very nice early Enfield 1907 rifles with low serial numbers. Imports ceased at behest of the British WO, who were prescient enough to realise in mid 1914 that Britain would need as many rifles as it could get.
7. All Australian contract rifles made from 1910 onwards at Enfield, BSA and LSA were still produced sighted for Mk.VI ball until these contracts were terminated in 1914.
8. The AIF at Gallipoli used these rifles and Mk.VI ammo throughout the campaign.
9. Back in Egypt in early 1916, the AIF’s rifles and 18 Pounders were turned over to the Brit arsenal system for repair and resighting, with current model Mk.III* rifles in Mk.VII ball issued in replacement. These were the rifles the AIF used in Francefrom mid 1916.
10. Cartridge collectors will tell you that the CAC 1914 dates are hard to find, as the fresh ammo was embarked for the first AIF deployments. The story goes that when they pulled out of Gallipoli, the Mk.VI ammo was burnt on the beach bonfire or dumped at sea as being of no further use. I believe the former but not sure about the latter…
11. A batch of SMLE Mk.IIIs that turned up ex-Turkish stores c.2000 (either through Century or Blue Ridge) contained large numbers of unmolested specimens all still sighted for Mk.VI ball. All were regimentally marked to specific battalions of regiments that fought at Gallipoli / Suvla and Kut.
12. Interestingly, a couple of these rifles were Enfield 1913 or 14 dated. They had the Australian D/I\ stamp on the receiver ring, but this had been cancelled out, and an Indian regiment stamped on instead. One of the cancelled Australian contract no doubt diverted…
13. Ian made the interesting point that our own snipers preferred to use captured Turkishrifles and ammo, as the Mk.VI ball’s MV (2040fps) and high trajectory was not optimal. He was pretty sure that the Mk.VI marked PPCo scopes were made for / used by NZ snipers.
ATB, DInformation
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