Nathan Forrest
Member
- Joined
- Oct 1, 2009
- Messages
- 114
- Reaction score
- 11
The key to the rattle battle is the shooter pulls the trigger w/ the little finger when the bolt is close. Never taking his hand off the bolt handle.
What's done is done. It will still probably clean up ok and may still be an accurate shooter.The barrel looks to be a bit rusted.
Should I get some Hoppe's #9 Solvent on it or what do you think?
I should never have shot it in 1992.
That bayonete is a testament to the quirky ingenuity of the British. I believe it was designed to function on both the No. 4 and on the Sten submachine gun. The grip had to rotate out of the way to be fitted to a No. 4 Rifle. Snapped back into its straight position, it could be fitted to the Sten or it could function as a general purpose knife (one big complaint about all other No. 4 bayonetes was that they lacked this functionality). You don't see very many of these, and they command a good price when offered for sale. My guess is that they were too expensive to manufacture.Below these is a No.7 bayonet for the No.4 rifle with a grip that rotates before mounting. It was not a successful design,not many were made,and it was dropped.
I've never understood why anyone would try to reload .303 Berdan-primed cases, when Winchester and Remington (and others as well) make Boxer-primed brass. I guess some folks just like a challenge?Older brass is Berdan primed and difficult to reload. In rear locking type bolts of this design there can be difficulties with head space such that brass doesn't last long before incipient head separation becomes evident. The head space is easily changed by changing the bolt head which were manufactured in different sizes 1 through 7. They simply screw on and off.