Clean Break
Member

Okay, I'll admit I used this title to suck you in. I've had all of these guns for years, but the facts are all accurate.
First, I traded off an AMT Backup .380 Auto (nice compact gun, served its purpose well oiled and hidden in my shirt pocket as a back up to my M9 Beretta on my hip which was my back up to my M16-A2 and 60 mm mortar) at a California gun show in 1989 and added $40 to get the .38 spl. Smith & Wesson revolver.


I wanted a handgun my wife could wear on her hip and hit reliably with while I was hunting, and she was alone in camp in the mountains.

It has a 6" barrel and is a Military and Police from the mid-40s I think. All of the serial numbers match on the frame, grips and crane etc. and are S 909 7XX.


I paid something like $220 for the AMT and it usually went bang 6 out of 6 times.... the K frame .38 always goes bang... the trigger breaks like a glass rod and all of those bullets go exactly where the open sights are aiming. I couldn't be happier with it.

The rifle is a Short Magazine Lee Enfield (No. 1 Mk. 111*) chambered in .303 British, made in 1917 in England.

I paid $85 for it at a Big 5 Sporting Goods store about 15 years ago, cleaned it up, rubbed 20 coats of boiled linseed oil on the stock and really enjoy shooting it. You can see some original armorer repairs on the stock in a couple places (I think they add character).

It likes 180 gr. Remington Round Nosed Core-Lokt factory ammo, but I've still got a few Turkish Milsurp rounds for it too.
The bayonet was a gift from a friend. It is stamped 1916 on it and has a 15 3/4" blade with offset blood grooves on each side.
When snapped onto the rifle, it makes for an intimidating combination (to include the brass butt plate for that infantry gesture known as a "butt stroke").

Here are some varmints that I got with the .303:


A couple questions:
What can you tell me about my .38 special?
Is it safe to fire +P ammunition in? (I haven't ever done so, but wanted to ask all the same).
I know the handgun is likely some thirty years newer than my .303 SMLE. Which Smith and Wesson revolver would be a better suited period piece to accompany the WWI rifle (I know... Webley ... but I'd rather have a Smith).
Thanks,
Clean Break
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