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Advisory Panel
Peter OT ? re Briitsh WWII Colt .38 spl New Service
Peter I have an off topic question regarding my "Battle of Britain
" 4 inch barrel .38 Speical Colt New Service revolver that is one of 87 purchased by Britain in 1940 to support the war.
The revolver has the typical broad arrow over Enfield inspector's markings located on the top left side of the frame, well above the cylinder thumb latch. There are no commercial proofs present. It has proper checkered period wood grips.
Of interest is that the gun has been converted from .38 Speical to .38/200 (.38 S&W) by opening up the cylinder chambers and apparently opening up the barrel interior diameter. The left side of the receiver over the barrel is stamped "/ 380" which is typical of this type of conversion--which I have seen before. The entire revolver has been refinished into a gray colored Parkerizing. The ejector rod head has been replaced with a knurled replacement of matching finish.
The question is do you know what country, organization or group did the conversion/finish work? There are no FTR or FR makrings or makers marks and the lack of commercial proofs is most interesting. Comments please and thank you.
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07-18-2009 10:56 PM
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(Deceased April 21, 2018)
NOT a conversion but rather originaly chambered for the standard BRITISH .38 calibre round rather than the American 38 spl.
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Glad you said that John as I was stumped. We also have a little Colt .38, 4" barrel, phosphate finish and I just assumed that a .38 special would fire our issue .38" Mk2Z! From what you said Paul, I just couldn't see a programme being instigated to bore out and/or rechamber for 87 revolvers..... Revolvers aren't my thing but I'll see what the paperwork says.
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Deceased January 15th, 2016

Originally Posted by
breakeyp
the lack of commercial proofs is most interesting.
Nor would one expect any, unless the revolver had been through British
civilian ownership.
BTW. What is the reference to the Battle of Britain?
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It would/should have British
military proofs Beerhunter. You know, the little crown over crossed flags and a P underneath. Someone told me that they were in fact crossed lances..., as in 'men on horseback'. Or even swords but whatever................. It would have been proofed prior to UK Military acceptance
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Legacy Member
According to the notes I took at Mrs. Milner's Aug. 2007 Bisley Lecture:-
We bought the following from Colt:
.38 Special Police Positive 972
Official Police 4449 All .38 Special
Officers Model Target 1076 all .38 Special blued
New Service 1590 .38, .357, .45 (no .455’s left)
New Service Target 96 .45, not all purchased from factory
Shooting Master 115 6”; 43 x .38 Sp, 12 x .357, 60 x .45
Single Action Army 161 or 163 .38 Sp, .357, .45 Colt
Govt. Model 2378
National Match 17 (fixed sight)
Govt. Model .38 Super 1120
Govt. Model .38 Super 250 fixed sight super match = 59 machined for adjustable sight but converted to fixed sight. Recorded in Colt records as HRS Super Match [high rear sight]
38 Sp reamed out to take .38-200
.357 rough reamer & finish reamer (little used)
Colts marked on left of barrel socket /.380 (some proved at this time)
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Thank You to Mk VII For This Useful Post:
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(Deceased April 21, 2018)
Well those were not the only oddball revolvers. purhased, there were also Iver Johnson 32 and 38 revolvers.
There was at least one contract for 24,870 Smith & Wesson revolvers and I really don't think the British
would order that many that would require a specialized (to them ) ammunition rather than their service ammo.
In fact I do have a Smith in 38S&W with broad arrows on it.
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Deceased January 15th, 2016
It would/should have
British
military proofs Beerhunter. You know, the little crown over crossed flags and a P underneath. Someone told me that they were in fact crossed lances..., as in 'men on horseback'. Or even swords but whatever................. It would have been proofed prior to UK Military acceptance
Of course, but the OP referred to 'commercial' which I translated to 'Civilian' (London or Birmingham) proof marks - as opposed to 'military'.
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Please correct me if I am wrong, but I understood that American guns purchased by the British
or sent to the UK as lend lease were not subjected at that time to commercial proof as they were for military use and were not submitted for military proof unless they were to be issued. The guns that apparently were never issued (e.g., U.S. M1917's) do not have British military proofs or broad arrow property marks. When those guns that were subjected to military proof were removed from storage for sale in the post-war years, the military proof was recognized and they did not require a civilian proof, while those with no military proof were submitted to the normal civilian proof.
Jim