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Legacy Member
Pre and post war Enfield tanker revolver Mk2
Been offered a mint tanker Enfield revolver. Normal these revolvers are marked with a date but this one seems to have markings but no date, just wondering if this is a post war made pistol as these were made till 1957. is there any way to identify a post war one by modification or were these pistols the same throughout production run. Thought Ian Skennerton done a booklet in the series about the Enfield revolver but it seems the Webleys, there is another book but the prices are a bit more than i would pay for.
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11-04-2021 06:35 AM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
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Legacy Member
Should be a date on top of the barrel assembly
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Legacy Member
What would make it a 'tanker' revolver? What makes it different from other Enfield Mk2 revolvers?
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Legacy Member
A tanker Enfield usually has a spurless hammer so its only double action. The idea is that the hammer spur doesn't catch on anything inside the tank.
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Advisory Panel
The "tanker" designation of the No.2Mk.1* and No.2Mk.1** revolvers is pure mythology. The Army requirement was for a simplified D/A only revolver and has nothing to do with tank crews. It seems to be a myth that will continue forever. The original Army docs that were at HQ, SASC in Warminster completely refute it. A friend who used to work there was always a bit dismayed that the folks who write this stuff and put it in books would never get an appointment to visit and get the actual facts during their research.
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The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to Brian Dick For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
So where did the tanker myth come from. I though it a bit strange that cutting the spur of the hammer off would make all the difference snagging inside a tank, did seem a load of tosh. I used to shoot my S&W mod 27 double action which was very accurate, thumb cocking a revolver made you move your grip every time, of course i had plenty of ammo to practice the DA method with unlike a service man with limited rounds per man.
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Legacy Member
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Legacy Member
Just like Jungle carbine for the No5.
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Contributing Member
or..........................the buried Spitfires in Burma......Brian is absolutely right, would love to meet those who thrive on misinformation or in the belief THEY have brought something new to the Milsurps table diverse sales tactics nothing more
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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Thank You to Gil Boyd For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member
Tanker or no tanker lets get back to the question of pre, wartime and post war models, where there changes even slight ones to identify the period the pistol was made, like finish, wartime machining short cuts, was the spurles hammer only a wartime requirement etc or was there no change to end of production.
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