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The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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12-24-2009 04:20 PM
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Damn it......another item I would love to have but never will............. She is a beauty!
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Someone asked in passing about the little red X on the magazine. This was a Miscellaneous Instruction requirement for certain magazines used on DP guns. Many of these magazines unofficially had the rear of the platform chamfered off to override the holding open device during training. While this was really an unofficial modification and not strictly allowed, it became by default, the norm and an 'acceptable' unauthorised modification! But in order that these 'training' magazines were imediately identifiable, it was decreed that '....be so marked with a suitable sized and distinct red letter 'X' on both sides'.
Now you know if you ever see such a beast
Just as a matter of interest, what's the lawful status of a dewat/deactivated Bren in the US and Canada. And just how lawful would a UK spec deact be? I often wondered.................
All have a merry Christmas
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Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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FREE MEMBER
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Happy Christmas peter & Family !!!
ATB
Neal
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Deceased January 15th, 2016
Someone asked in passing about the little red X on the magazine. This was a Miscellaneous Instruction requirement for certain magazines used on DP guns. Many of these magazines unofficially had the rear of the platform chamfered off to override the holding open device during training.
When short of drill rounds, we used to wedge the platform with a coin. A half-penny in fact. (Not a half-Pee but a proper 240 pennies to the pound half-penny.)
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I remember it well. The DP guns were p[articularly hard.... and harsh on drill rounds - particulatly .303 drill rounds. I remember going into the ammo compound and seeing thousands of still new in wrap rounds, still tied up in that pink paper. I asked the ammo storeman why they were there and not out in the training wing and he told me that if they had them, they'd just ruin them within a year............................
Words failed me. It's as though he was paying for them himself! He didn't have them for long as within 5 minutes I'd put in a demand from me the 2i/c, via the Training Major for every last one! And don't tell him, but I think I've still got 3 sealed packets in my drawer, all dated RG 25/10/50
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Legacy Member
no expert.... but
The type of de-milled rifles and machine guns I saw in Normandy in 2004 are quite illegal in the US of A. I was speaking to a British reenactor about his kit, and he was quite willing to break it down for me (I've got pics somewhere). He was a policeman, former military. The extent of the demil on the rifle was a cut on the inside of the barrel, and a plug in the chamber. On this side of the pond, a Bren or Vickers would need the guts removed, and denial plates welded in place, with no means to change the barrel or chamber a round. Others may chime in, but this is what I've seen around, and sold from IMA. Some Stens are sold with solid aluminum receivers. Merely cutting a chunk out of a receiver does not render it "not a machine gun" in the eyes of the ATF, if it is "readily restorable" what ever that means. Bren receivers here must be cut into three pieces with 1/4" flame cuts.
Happy New Year to you and yours as well,
/limpetmine
Someone asked in passing about the little red X on the magazine. This was a Miscellaneous Instruction requirement for certain magazines used on DP guns. Many of these magazines unofficially had the rear of the platform chamfered off to override the holding open device during training. While this was really an unofficial modification and not strictly allowed, it became by default, the norm and an 'acceptable' unauthorised modification! But in order that these 'training' magazines were imediately identifiable, it was decreed that
'....be so marked with a suitable sized and distinct red letter 'X' on both sides'.
Now you know if you ever see such a beast
Just as a matter of interest, what's the lawful status of a dewat/deactivated Bren in the US and
Canada. And just how lawful would a UK spec deact be? I often wondered.................
All have a merry Christmas
Last edited by limpetmine; 02-26-2010 at 10:49 AM.
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Legacy Member
Sad tale
Here is my demilled Bren Mk II, an Inglis. Loaned for a display and stolen.
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Jeeeees, Limpetmine....., just HOW do you sneak out with a Bren? Is such a beast easily replaced in the US? Sad loss
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Legacy Member
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It was the finest de-milled kit I've seen, and was to have been the basis of my semi-kit. It cleaned up very well, and the wood was great. The gas cylinder wasn't chopped, and the action cycled and hammer dropped. I'm still sick.....What kits that can be had today have been burned and cut through every mounting pin and just made a mess of. With parts missing that are near to impossible to find (the bolt handle, especially) No, the good ones have dried up. I have a replacement, but is missing a few odds and ends. (see above).
PL, were there ever any left handed shooters of the Bren? What with the offset sight, I would assume lefties would be a mortar man?
I guess the thief stuck the Bren in his waist band, 'sall I can figure...
Jeeeees, Limpetmine....., just HOW do you sneak out with a Bren? Is such a beast easily replaced in the US? Sad loss
Last edited by limpetmine; 12-29-2009 at 02:34 PM.
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