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  1. #1
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    More new owner stuff.

    OK, now I know that I have an Enfield Martini, A Pattern, thanks. In looking into removing the fore end, it looks like my barrel bands are reversed. (?) The bayonet lug is on the right side and so are the screw heads. Pics here are not sharp enough to determine. No big deal but I'd like it to be right.
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    A Collector's View - The SMLE Short Magazine Lee Enfield 1903-1989. It is 300 8.5x11 inch pages with 1,000+ photo’s, most in color, and each book is serial-numbered.  Covering the SMLE from 1903 to the end of production in India in 1989 it looks at how each model differs and manufacturer differences from a collecting point of view along with the major accessories that could be attached to the rifle. For the record this is not a moneymaker, I hope just to break even, eventually, at $80/book plus shipping.  In the USA shipping is $5.00 for media mail.  I will accept PayPal, Zelle, MO and good old checks (and cash if you want to stop by for a tour!).  CLICK BANNER to send me a PM for International pricing and shipping. Manufacturer of various vintage rifle scopes for the 1903 such as our M73G4 (reproduction of the Weaver 330C) and Malcolm 8X Gen II (Unertl reproduction). Several of our scopes are used in the CMP Vintage Sniper competition on top of 1903 rifles. Brian Dick ... BDL Ltd. - Specializing in British and Commonwealth weapons Specializing in premium ammunition and reloading components. Your source for the finest in High Power Competition Gear. Here at T-bones Shipwrighting we specialise in vintage service rifle: re-barrelling, bedding, repairs, modifications and accurizing. We also provide importation services for firearms, parts and weapons, for both private or commercial businesses.
     

  3. #2
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    Never mind, I'm an idiot. It's OK.

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    Nate, as noted in the previous thread, you have a Martini-Henry MK IV that started life as a Enfield-Martini. Nobody has an Enfield-Martini except for the Pattern Room and one or two museums (at most). All Enfield-Martinis made for issue were converted to MH MK IV rifles before they ever left the armory. If your receiver shows signs of being a EM rifle (off-center IV), then you have a pattern B rifle. Pattern "A" rifles, while also conversions of EM rifles, were rebuilt using a new receiver to eliminate certain receiver features of early EM rifles. Pattern "B" rifles were conversions of later EM rifles and kept their EM receivers. Pattern "C" rifles were all new parts. Both "A" and "C" rifles have receivers showing the "IV" centered under the lock viewers mark, where as on Pattern "B" rifles the "V" portion of the "IV" was added off to the right of the original "I" that the receiver bore when it was an EM rifle.

    A tad confusing perhaps, but they are all MK IV rifles as far as the Brit military was concerned. The Pattern "A", "B" and "C" is a collectors convention adopted to distinguish between the variations resulting from production. These designations were not used during the rifle's military life.

    A serious or curious collector should invest in the 3 vol set "A TREATISE ON THE BRITISH MILITARY MARTINI" http://www.skennerton.com/rifles.html

    Yes the books are a tad expensive, but the info is invaluable.

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    Easier way to determine which pattern. Only the A pattern will accept a socket bayonet, the B and C patterns will only take a blade bayonet.
    Though all Martini's can use a blade.

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    Thanks Guys, it is then a B. I've been collecting for over 50 years and this Martini thing is the most confusing arm I've run across.

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