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Banned
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05-20-2009 07:52 PM
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Originally Posted by
Edward Horton
Mr. Strangely Brown, is this posting better or does it still need more improvement.
(yes your comments do matter)

I'm almost impressed Ed. 
Mr Kepler is a long time critic of the Lee Enfield Rifle
; if their so awful it does make me wonder why he posts anything about them at all!
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
John Kepler
So...your point being?
You made an incorrect statement; I was just offering the historical perspective.

Originally Posted by
John Kepler
And the US was already building and issuing a semi-automatic battle-rifle making the No. 4 obsolete rather than just obsolescent before it was even built...keeping it into the mid-1950's is even less justifiable.
The UK
tested the Garand
in the 1930s, but it was rejected because at that the rifle was not in a suitable state for manufacture & adoption by a country facing imminent war. Lets not forget US had another three or four years to develop & modify the rifle before it went into mass production, and still had to use bolt actions extensively. UK was not backward in considering semi-auto small arms - practically every single inter-war invention was tested. Small arms have a very insignificant strategic effect in war, so its not at all surprising that a proven system with no particular disadvantage from existing semi-autos should be ordered into mass production.
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Legacy Member
One thing I have not seen mentioned yet in this thread -- The British
Long Lee rifle finished essentially "2nd" to the Krag
in the 1892 US magazine rifle trials. (Recall that the trials were really a competition for the magazine and receiver design.) The Lee was well liked by the board. However, according to the recent book The American Rifle, Mr. Lee had gotten cross-ways with someone at Ordnance (Mordicai I believe but I may be mis-remembering what I read) during the 1880s. The Chief of Ordnance decreed that there was no way in Hell the US Army would do business with Lee. Therefore, there was no way the Lee action would win. The Krag was more or less "developed" during the competition (a number of Krag variants were entered). The resulting Krag rifle is my favorite to take to the range, but the Enfield (as well as the Mauser) proved to be the better actions for a battle rifle.
That said, I don't think the Krag was as backward a design as some critics have stated. It had the unique feature that the magazine could be topped off with the bolt closed and a clip loading feature was adaptable (the Parkhurst device). The action may not have been as amenable to high pressure cartridges as the Mauser (neither was the Enfield), but the cartridge could have been evolved along the same lines that the .303 British was. If you put a 150-170 gr bullet in a .30-40 and load it with powder available by the early 20th century, one could have acheived ballistics very competitive with the bolt rifles of the day. I think what really killed the Krag was the cost of manufacture of the receiver.
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John Kepler
Guest

Originally Posted by
Edward Horton
When you conceder the fact the last name of Kepler is of
German
origin, and Kepler means “Hat Maker”in German, I wonder why a German hat maker thinks he know so much about a
British
and Commonwealth rifle.
Because my Mother's family are McCroskey's.....John McCroskey, my direct ancestor was one of the "Over-Mountain Men" that taught the British a rather pointed lesson in the value of individual marksmanship and accurate firearms on their "walk" up Kings Mountain in 1780, with a "follow-up briefing" 4 months later at Cowpens! Demonstrating the short-comings of British firearms has been sort-of a "family tradition" for over 300 years!
FWIW....my Dad's family got the hell out of "The Old Country" in 1685, settling in Burkes County PA....Mom's people came to Virginia via Ireland in 1690. My family (both sides!) have fought for this country in every conflict from the Revolution to Iraq and Afghanistan....a Hun last-name means NOTHING to me, Got sie dank! I'm an American...no "hyphens", no apologies!
As for Enfields. I've collected them as historical pieces for over 45 years. I enjoy them as a collectible and historical artifact...but as a trained rifleman, find that as a rifleman's tool, it is an insult. The L-E may be the very first modern "bullet-hose" as opposed to a rifleman's tool....some lessons, like Kings Mountain, even when learned, are not taken to heart!
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There are several hallowed words in the English language. A few that I remember from as long ago as I could speak were Spitfire (no, not the Triumph.....), Bren gun and the most hallowed of all.... Lee Enfield.
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Banned
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John Kepler
Guest

Originally Posted by
Edward Horton
Mr. Kepler
My posting was meant as humor, the last time the
British
were mean to us was in 1812 when the burned Washington DC and I have forgiven them for it.
Please remember some of us really enjoy our “British”
Enfield Rifles
.
I will assume it was the Irish in you that made you post the photo of the ruptured .303 case from the Enfield that flexed three inches.

(Irish fiction and fibbing)

History lesson: In 1895, Lord Salisbury, the British PM was within hours of asking the Queen for a Declaration of War against the United States
....seems he felt "slighted" by President Cleveland and the US Congress endorsing the acceptance of a disputed border between Venezuela and British Guiana that "annoyed" him (the dispute wasn't completely settled until 1899, and relations with Britain were strained the entire time). Cooler heads may have kept Lord Salisbury from going to war with the US....but it was a VERY close-run affair. We may not have been shooting at each other since 1814....but it wasn't all sweetness and light either. It is this incident that prompted Teddy Roosevelt to insist on the US rebuilding the Navy so we could "carry a big stick" the next time the Brits decided we were being "cheeky"!
Simply because I can't agree that the Enfield is God's gift to the shooting world doesn't mean I fail to enjoy them....I simply choose to collect them and shoot something else (it just is not a rifleman's tool)!
FWIW, I have NEVER posted a picture on this or any other forum, and my people were Scots, not Irish.
Last edited by John Kepler; 05-22-2009 at 08:30 PM.
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