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What should I do with these Lee Enfields ?
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03-10-2009 10:56 PM
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Legacy Member
It is your call. Do you use them as shooters and do you want to carry the extra weight. It wont be hard to put another wood set on them. The Lithy will look ok but wont be original . ie the rifles history is stamped on the wood.
Like what you do do what you like
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Looks like someone bobbed the barrel off on the Long Branch. Unless you're willing to get into a rebarreling project it would be best left in sporter configuration. The other two look restorable to me, as the pics show no molested metalwork. It is enjoyable returning them to military appearance.
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Ditto, leave the longbranch alone, because the front sight is not original and requires wook, restore the other two. At the moment there's a set of no1mk3 Australian wood on fleebay that'd be perfect for the lithgow as they often rewooded early lithgows with ww2 wood for that conflict. Aussie wood sets are not that common, but also springfield sporters and numrich will be able to help with standard non aussie sets and all other parts for a decent price. Per rifle you might get it done for less than $100.
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If I was you, I'd put them all in a parcel and send them to me. If you twist my arm, I'll contribute a bit towards the postage
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Advisory Panel
The SMLEs could certainly be restored as representative specimens.
As mentionned, the LB's muzzle has been trimmed back, and restoration would not be worthwhile given that it is a '43. Well, if you had a barrel on hand, and did the work yourself, it might make sense. I did restore the barrel on a low numbered '41 LB Mk. I once. I performed a barrel graft in order to retain the original breech markings, the transplanted portion being smoothbored so that the rifle could be fired. A muzzle from a scrapped barrel could be spliced onto yours, and would be unnoticable to other than very close inspection, but this rifle does not warrant the effort.
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Titiaq is dead right Ken. I did what he suggested on a .22" CNo7 at Warminster that had the barrel cut back just behind the bayonet lugs. Used a length of off-cut No4 barrel muzzle. Just stepped the original barrel under the block, band foresight and undercut the new section with a .23" smoothed muzzle. Soft soldered the two together and they alighed perfectly by means of the foresight block band lugs. The join is just like Elton Johns wig. Invisible
You could just wrap 'em up and send 'em to me................
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Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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Better yet Peter, join me on this side of the Atlantic for some undoubtedly well deserved vacation time. Ken could easily send the rifles (he's in Canada like me I think...), and you could then teach me tons more about the Enfield World in my humble garage. Warm weather will be here soon, after all...
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Just keep them the way they are. They look reasonably well made, the wood looks nice. It´s not as if you´d be increasing the number of very rare specimens by restoringbthem to original spec. Unless you´re looking for a new passtime ...