+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 12

Thread: Missing front sight blade on No. 5, where do I start?

Click here to increase the font size Click here to reduce the font size
  1. #1
    FREE MEMBER
    NO Posting or PM's Allowed
    medbill's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2019
    Last On
    09-26-2023 @ 05:21 PM
    Location
    Upstate NY
    Posts
    2
    Local Date
    03-28-2024
    Local Time
    07:39 AM

    Missing front sight blade on No. 5, where do I start?

    Hi everyone! Life long firearms enthusiast and collector here. I recently inherited a No5 from my father in law. I was able to get the correct magazine for it but now I need a front sight blade. I see there are many options regarding sight blade height. Rather than buying every one I can where do you suggest I start or any tricks or shortcuts to getting it right. I am really looking forward to shooting this cool rifle and of course I have a feeling it won't be my only Enfield but for right now it is.

    Thanks for any help/advice!
    Bill
    Information
    Warning: This is a relatively older thread
    This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current.

  2. # ADS
    Friends and Sponsors
    Join Date
    October 2006
    Location
    Milsurps.Com
    Posts
    All Threads
    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
    Contributing Member Micheal Doyne's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2019
    Last On
    03-26-2024 @ 02:34 AM
    Location
    Wiltshire Uk
    Posts
    397
    Real Name
    Ed Vigors
    Local Date
    03-28-2024
    Local Time
    12:39 PM
    Hi Medbill,
    I started out in a similar position to your self, all be it I had a single blade but it printed pretty low (or high) against the sights bullet drop adjustments. I started by buying blades based on the guessed increment needed . I quickly found that:
    1) modern ammunition is hard to match the sights for at all ranges, so I always end up with some over (normally, some times under for hotter loads but I tend to avoid these) setting of the sights.

    2) chances in ammo (I build my own so opportunity to improve each batch is high) result in a check of zero and some times a blade change.

    3) bedding, this may be less relevant to you with a No5 but my number No4’s bedding has been a bit of an iterative learning curve that I’m a long way from finishing, any how for me changes in bedding result in a zero check and some time a blade change.

    4) ONE LEE ENFIELD IS NEVER ENOUGH truth be told and based on the evidence of this site no number of Lee Enfields appears to be enough, so you will likely need more blades eventually.

    Where does all this get us and what point was I trying to make, well firstly one one blade will be perfect so you could do worse than get a zero and live with it for know. However given the number of things that can require you to adjust zero a set is useful.

    If I where you I would shop around for someone offering a full set and buy that, typically there is some discount vs buying the separately. Once I had a set I’d start with zero and work up or down from there. If you really don’t want a set, select your best guess (from memory there is the most frequently used highly which I think is one size over zero for a No.4 based on google, some one here will know the DS solution) and see where that gets you.

    Relatively early on it was recommended to me that rather than buy a set I should just get the tallest blade and grind it down till it was right. I wouldn’t recommend it option. For me it is destroying history for little value, Sod’s law would mean you removed too much, and the only guy I know who did it said it was a surprisingly time consuming process and When he was finished he ended up with a miss shaped blade (rounded rather than squared off), and it was too short.

    Any way just my two cents but there for what it’s worth.

  4. Avoid Ads - Become a Contributing Member - Click HERE
  5. #3
    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Last On
    Yesterday @ 10:05 PM
    Location
    Victoria BC
    Posts
    29,836
    Real Name
    Jim
    Local Date
    03-28-2024
    Local Time
    04:39 AM
    Good point, if you can get the full set you can zero perfectly...then at worst you could sell the remainder. Peter Laidlericon and a couple others here should know what sight height they would have started with upon assembly...
    Regards, Jim

  6. #4
    Legacy Member Frederick303's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Last On
    07-28-2020 @ 09:41 PM
    Location
    Pipersville PA US
    Posts
    739
    Local Date
    03-28-2024
    Local Time
    07:39 AM
    The sights are now available from Century arms, they have the old Springfield sporters stock and it is starting to make its appearance on their site

  7. #5
    Contributing Member Micheal Doyne's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2019
    Last On
    03-26-2024 @ 02:34 AM
    Location
    Wiltshire Uk
    Posts
    397
    Real Name
    Ed Vigors
    Local Date
    03-28-2024
    Local Time
    12:39 PM
    Following a short google DS Solutions a useful website, mentions that there was a specific No.5 blade set, with some No.5 accepting dovetailed No.4 blades but some not.
    A Brief Explanation of Lee Enfield No4, No5 and SMLE Foresight Blades.

    ---------- Post added at 09:50 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:47 PM ----------

    DS also seem to have a full set of blades for £15

    https://www.ds-solutions.co.uk/Lee-E...plete-(9-Sizes)

  8. Thank You to Micheal Doyne For This Useful Post:


  9. #6
    FREE MEMBER
    NO Posting or PM's Allowed
    medbill's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2019
    Last On
    09-26-2023 @ 05:21 PM
    Location
    Upstate NY
    Posts
    2
    Local Date
    03-28-2024
    Local Time
    07:39 AM
    Thread Starter
    Thank you everyone! I checked DS and they are out of stock. Thank you very much for finding that for me though. You guys are great!

  10. #7
    Legacy Member Daan Kemp's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2016
    Last On
    Today @ 06:54 AM
    Location
    Centurion RSA
    Age
    73
    Posts
    1,392
    Real Name
    Daan Kemp
    Local Date
    03-28-2024
    Local Time
    01:39 PM
    My experience of front sights are they are harder than you think, and filing or grinding makes a tall too short very quickly if you don't take extreme care.

  11. #8
    Advisory Panel
    Roger Payne's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Last On
    03-20-2024 @ 06:05 AM
    Location
    Sutton Coldfield, UK.
    Posts
    3,429
    Real Name
    Roger Payne
    Local Date
    03-28-2024
    Local Time
    11:39 AM
    Thank you for posting that link Michael. It's extremely well explained & clear.

  12. #9
    Legacy Member Bruce_in_Oz's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Last On
    Today @ 04:54 AM
    Location
    Brisbane
    Posts
    2,237
    Local Date
    03-28-2024
    Local Time
    09:39 PM
    The trick is that the height of the actual BLADE in each series is pretty much the same.

    The adjustment increments are in the thickness of the rectangular horizontal base, between the dovetail and the blade.

    Thus, the sight picture of the blade in the aperture is essentially the same no matter what number item is in the dove-tail.

    There are also "commercial" ones outside the height range of the "issued" sizes. These were made to compensate for the use of "non-issue" bedding techniques and fancy micrometer rear-sights, like the Central or Parker Hale, etc., AND allowed a bit of leeway with the height of the sight-line relative to the barrel and butt.

    Once the range shooters changed the rules to allow "globe" or "tunnel" front-sights, with interchangeable "iris" elements, all those spare blades for conventional sights started disappearing.

  13. The Following 3 Members Say Thank You to Bruce_in_Oz For This Useful Post:


  14. #10
    Legacy Member Alan de Enfield's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Last On
    Today @ 05:50 AM
    Location
    Y Felinheli, Gogledd Cymru
    Posts
    2,526
    Real Name
    Alan De Enfield
    Local Date
    03-28-2024
    Local Time
    11:39 AM
    Quote Originally Posted by Micheal Doyne View Post
    Following a short google DS Solutions a useful website, mentions that there was a specific No.5 blade set, with some No.5 accepting dovetailed No.4 blades but some not.
    A Brief Explanation of Lee Enfield No4, No5 and SMLE Foresight Blades.

    ---------- Post added at 09:50 PM ---------- Previous post was at 09:47 PM ----------

    DS also seem to have a full set of blades for £15

    https://www.ds-solutions.co.uk/Lee-E...plete-(9-Sizes)
    It looks like they have re-written Peter Laidlericon's information from 2008.


    Sights and the No4 rifle.
    A bit of heavy weekend reading for you.......................

    There has recently been some too-ing and fro-ing correspondence about the sights used on the No4 rifles. Maybe it’s time to open up a few little previously unknown or certainly not fully understood points.

    Let’s take the foresights first. For the No4 rifle, there were 4 distinct TYPES of foresight blade. The very FIRST was, naturally enough, designated the
    BLADE, foresight. It came in eight sizes, from -.030”, -.015, 0, +.015”, +.030”, +.045”, +.060” and +.075”. These sizes (and I’m sure you all know this by heart…..) indicate the tip of the blade height below or above 1” of the exact centerline of the bore while the blade size ‘0’ is exactly 1” above the centre line of the bore ……, phew! Now for another misunderstood point. All of the actual BLADE heights are the same of approx .140” but it’s the .38” wide blade BASE (or stool) height that differs to make up the sizes. I know that some of you will say that this isn’t correct because ……… I know this and that’s because some of the commercial companies, including Parker Hale made their own variants including thinner widths, blow-up tyres and wind-up windows etc. BUT I’m talking about the Ministry of Supply/Army issue blades

    This blade was followed by a later blade style so as a result, the first original blade was redesignated the BLADE, foresight, Mk1. The Mk1 blade is easily identifiable by having a SOLID base. This is because it was retained firmly in position, gripped by the split BLOCK, band, foresight. The split foresight block is closed, to grip the solid blade, by a reverse headed screwdriver. It is the REAR of the Mk1 blade that we ought to be aware of now, where the undercut/inward sloping blade part meets up with the block, which then slopes outwards towards the base of the block. So, the side elevation of the blade forms a side-on ‘V’ shape.

    This rearwards and upwards sloping base could and did allow a line of reflected light to shine straight back into the shooters eye. Maybe not on the manicured ranges at Bisley but it certainly did in the bleak sunshine of Tunisia and Italyicon from where the complaints came

    The next foresight blade was introduced as a result of efforts to cheapen the cost of the No4 rifle in 1941. This time, instead of using a split block, band, foresight and the reverse headed 4BAscrew, the block, band was left solid. But in accordance with good engineering practice and to maintain the required friction to hold the blade secure within the block band foresight, the BLADE base was manufactured with a split block. This split block blade was called the BLADE, foresight, Mk1*

    The sizes remained the same as did the zeroing procedure, as did the side-on ‘V’ side elevation of the rear of the blade. It’s just that the block was easier and cheaper to manufacture. The new slot made very little difference to the cost of the blades because a), they were manufactured ‘biscuit-block (some call it chocolate block) fashion anyway and b), the addition of a simple slitting saw operation along the base was an almost academic addition and c), the original blades were still being produced anyway!

    So there you have the earliest Mk1and Mk1* blades.

    Now here is where we get a little more complicated. The Mk2 blade…………. The Mk2 blade was very similar to the Mk1 blade with its 8 sizes and its solid block base only this time, where the undercut/outward sloping blade part meets the base part, the base extends rearwards a small amount, then the BASE takes on an undercut inward sloping angle too. This immediately solved the reflected light problem because now, both the blade and the base reflected downwards. This blade was introduced as the BLADE, foresight, Mk2

    If things were simple, the next blade would be designated the Mk2* but we don’t do simple…., we do complicated! So, the next blade became the BLADE, foresight, Mk3. As you might expect, the Mk3 blade was identical to the double undercut Mk2 but this time came with a split base to use in the solid block band foresight.

    The earlier Mk1 and Mk1* blades were thereafter, obsolescent. Obsolescent but not obsolete so there are thousands of thousands still in service……………

    THE No5 RIFLE
    If you have a No5 rifle, then a similar situation arose there too but the situation was even more dire as the reflected line of shine certainly DID cause problems. So while the No5 blades were all split blocks, the;
    Mk1 split block blade for the No5 equates to the Mk1* blade for a No4 rifle
    and the
    Mk 2 split block blade for the No5 equates to the Mk3 blade for a No4 rifle.
    There were different part numbers for the blades indicating that there were subtle differences between the No4 and No5 types. Quite what the differences between the blades were on paper didn’t manifest its way to us as young Armourers in Malaya! We used split block ‘double undercut’ blades on every No5 we zeroed of course, but they all came from the same tubs, regardless of whether it was a No4 or 5 blade. They all looked the same to us and we treated them the same too!

    But back to No4 rifles and the BLOCK band, foresight. Are you in for the long haul? Soon after the large late 40’s FTR programmes, it was established at Fazakerley that a large percentage of fully refurbished rifles were impossible to zero due to them shooting too high. Fazakerley sought to obtain a relaxation in order to use the +.090” and +.105” STEN gun foresight blades but already there were problems relating to the final inspection standards that I won’t go into. But the same problems were apparent outside the factories and Base Workshops, in service too so while the factories, FTR programme contractors and the large REME Base workshops were NOT permitted to use the higher Sten foresight blades, a relaxation was sought that they could be used at unit level (both high sizes) and Field workshop level (just the .090 size). But this was palliative and not a cure by any means. The answer was that where a rifle was perfect in every other way, then a Mk2 BLOCK Band foresight was available.

    The ‘new’ BLOCK, band, foresight was .030” taller, at .490” than the original Mk1 block band, at .460” tall. This immediately, but invisibly, allowed for a further 2 increases in blade height (……. think about it!). The new blocks can be identified by the figure 1H for the Mk1 split block or a 2H for the Mk2 solid block, marked on the rear sloping surface. But even these didn’t last long because they only allowed for a further two ‘invisible’ increases of foresight. The problem was more acute than that with thousands otherwise perfect No4 rifles stacking up in Ordnance depots unable to be zeroed So in an act of almost desperation in January 1954, two FURTHER foresight block bands blocks were introduced. These blocks were heightened by a further .030” to .520”. So we have the original block band height of .460”, the 1949 increased height to .490” then the 1954 block band with a height of .520”. At a stroke, we now have a block band foresight that allows the highest blade ( the .075”…., don’t forget that anything higher was for the Sten gun) to be, in effect .135”……… which is 1.135” above the centre line of the bore

    So now we have a total of SIX BLOCK, band foresights.
    The Mk1 and Mk2 original, the
    Mk1H and 2H modified both .030” higher than the original, and the
    Mk1 and 2 SECOND modified, now .060” higher than the original!
    You’re not quite believing this are you? But help was at hand. The second block was pure duplication so was declared obsolescent. So that after 1954, only the first, original blocks and the third pattern, .060” taller were available from Ordnance stores. While the second pattern was obsolescent, you HAD to have the original, lower block of course in order to cater for those rifles firing LOW!

    Jeeeees, we had to learn, know and put into practice all of this rubbish! The most astute of you will now be looking at your ‘original, untouched since the factory’ rifles to see if it has the higher foresight block band fitted. Only a post 1949 made rifle will have a block marked 1H or 2H and only a post 1954 made rifle will have a block marked 1 or 2 on the rear surface as original. Before that, they were bare!

    But there’s a little more……………. Our acceptable zeroing standards state after zeroing, the blade of the foresight will overhang or be level with the edge of the foresight block. If the edge is inboard of the edge of the block, then it indicates that something is wrong with the rifle. BUT, it was discovered that while the UKicon made foresight blade bases were .38” wide, due to a tolerance error, the Canadianicon bases were .43” wide. Without going into the technicalities, a rifle fitted with a Canadian .43” wide base could fail the zeroing criteria unnecessarily. So these Canadian .43” wide blades were all declared obsolete and withdrawn.

    There, a little bit about a previously unknown feature of the No4 rifle! Not a lot of people know that!
    Mine are not the best, but they are not too bad. I can think of lots of Enfields I'd rather have but instead of constantly striving for more, sometimes it's good to be satisfied with what one has...

  15. The Following 6 Members Say Thank You to Alan de Enfield For This Useful Post:


+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. Loose Front Sight Blade M96
    By nijalninja in forum Mauser Rifles
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 11-23-2018, 09:20 AM
  2. 03A3 Front Sight Blade
    By StrangeRanger in forum M1903/1903A3/A4 Springfield Rifle
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 11-29-2017, 05:05 PM
  3. No. 1 Mk.111 Front Sight Blade thickness
    By mungo in forum The Lee Enfield Knowledge Library Collectors Forum
    Replies: 6
    Last Post: 03-28-2015, 06:16 AM
  4. front sight blade
    By rwright in forum Krag Rifles
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 12-21-2009, 09:31 AM
  5. USMC Front Sight Blade
    By CapnJohn in forum M1903/1903A3/A4 Springfield Rifle
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 03-23-2009, 10:13 PM

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
Raven Rocks