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Legacy Member
Are there NO markings on it? It looks like one of the grade one types...
I really checked out the rifle today for any markings as who did the conversion. The front sight ramp is marked Parker Hale England. The magazine is marked, "Made in UaPa?, Expressly for Parker Hale Limited". Other than that no other details....I'm guessing it's a Parker Hale conversion.
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Thank You to bros For This Useful Post:
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02-24-2017 09:44 PM
# ADS
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Advisory Panel
That would follow without absolute proof. The mags are interchangeable and the sights are available...but it sure looks like one.
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Advisory Panel
Rob, you're confusing the issue a bit. Thread 12 tells what the instructions to Quartermasters stated and referred to. Presumably to ensure that
Canada got it's own weapons back - albeit eventually. Or at least, got proportionately the same quantity back for return to Canada and the new post-war Army. Just my guess
What I was getting at Peter, and what I thought you were getting at, was whether there was any policy of returning Canadian-made rifles to Canada? If the C Broad Arrow mark was put on whatever rifles were issued to the Canadian Army in the UK, wherever they were made, then as you say, from the instructions you quoted, those would presumably be the rifles returned to Canadian possession. Not much point in Canada taking back thousands of British made rifles of course, so maybe they were never issued, but passed on to NATO allies?
I've heard reports that Canada standardized (logically enough) on the No.4 MkI* after WWII and an ex-armourer here told John R. (RIP) that any Mk.I rifles which came through post-war were stripped and either scrapped or the receiver replaced with a Mk.I* from stores.
Maybe this would explain the manufacture of new MkI* rifles at Long Branch after WWII, when logically with our greatly reduced military, we should not have needed any new rifles for a long, long time to come, IF we got back what had been made in WWII.
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same.
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Advisory Panel
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same.
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