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P-17 (M-17) Enfield
Just aquired one of these and will be getting it in a few days. The question I have is how rare are these in full military configuration in vg condition? I haven't seen many and the ones I have seen are usually sporterized. As for its English cousin the P-14 how rare are they, I have a line on one in full military but its a little rough do I or don't I?
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08-25-2007 12:47 PM
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Thanks for the info Badger. Great article attachment!! If you want help with a write up I could take a crack at it. PM me and let me know what has to be done.
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ive recently posted a breif reflection that i will recap here , i think these often get the bum wrap , they are fine rifles , while not really enfeilds[its a mauser mimic much closer related to the US M1903 which they had also looked closely at as a simple reconfiguration] they were developed there , the Pattern 1913 is sorta the holy grail here and if i had one it would certainly hold the prominent position in my collection ,
since i collect both 'enfields' and 'springfields' i think of the rifle as the link between the two ,
im sure there were those who would have prefered a M1903 in WWI in the field but the M1917 were fielded in greater numbers and soldiered on into WWII and beyond in foreign service ,
they could be a collecting area all their own , with three manufacturers , two countries original service , three commonwealth marks including reworks in the wheedon and US rearsenals , the commonwealth 'F'ine adjustment rear sights and 'T'elescopic trials as well as the postwar foreign service , and then there are the remington commercials and the later foreign contracts , so many rifles-so little time ,

i have three left , winchester M1917 , remington M1917[canadian service marked] , eddystone P1914 [early mkI with the volleys intact] ,
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Looks good.
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Hobson's choice

Originally Posted by
A square 10
im sure there were those who would have prefered a M1903 in WWI in the field but the M1917 were fielded in greater numbers
We needed a lot of rifles in hurry in, come Spring of '17, and the Pattern '14 Enfield tooling already up and running was quickly and easily modified to run the M1917.
Alvin York didn't like what he called "the English gun", because he couldn't "lead" with the peep sight, so unlike the buckhorn rear he was used to. He used a borrowed M1903 the day he captured "the whole damned German
Army", and the gun writers have had a field day with it ever since. Their preferrance has more to do with "chauvinism" than with any technical or tactical distinction between the two rifles, which has always puzzled me, as the M'03 is, after all, but a "license-built" Mauser.
I'm sure you will enjoy shooting it. I shoot both, and find little to choose between them.
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agreed oozlefinch , M1903 was a Mauser clone [actualy dispute over the 'license thing'and payments occured after wwI] and the P1914/M1917 were developed by enfield designers based on the M1903 ,
the big reason we fielded more 17s than 03s was to do with the low productiuon of the federal arsenals and the high output of the contractors-remington/winchester/eddystone coupled to that need you site so well , this set the stage for the outsourcing to commercial contractors in the WWII and after periods
it was evident to all thus the M1rifle , M1carbine , M1903mod/M1903A3 , into the M14
, M16 , all being contracted out , with the M14 being the last of the rifles produced by govment arsaenals
Last edited by A square 10; 09-06-2007 at 10:57 AM.
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Well you have got me motivated. I'm taking an '03 and my '17 out today.

Would this be a flock of Remington's?

Not near a nice looking as some pictured here. I like the no buckel slings shown above.
Cheers
MJ
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Found it. Knew I had another one. Well used Win. P-14.

I have never tried this one.
Cheers
MJ
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