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For the Sporterized Enfield enthusiasts. |
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Goosic
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Joined: September 12 2017 Location: Phoenix Arizona Status: Offline Points: 8842 |
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Topic: For the Sporterized Enfield enthusiasts.Posted: May 12 2022 at 8:30am |
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Shamu
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Logo Designer / Donating Member Joined: April 25 2007 Location: MD, USA. Status: Offline Points: 20510 |
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Posted: May 12 2022 at 10:45am |
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Nice! how well did the synthetic stock fit? How did you bed the synthetic if it was needed?
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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)
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Honkytonk
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Joined: December 30 2017 Location: Brandon Mb Status: Offline Points: 5190 |
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Posted: May 12 2022 at 11:55am |
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Love Sporters!
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Goosic
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Joined: September 12 2017 Location: Phoenix Arizona Status: Offline Points: 8842 |
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Posted: May 12 2022 at 2:10pm |
The only minor modifications I made were to cut away the back section of the forend so it would fit around the block the trigger is hung to and then fitted a cross screw. The actual fit of the forend to the reciever and barrel required nothing special. A drop in procedure. There are very minor flaws/gaps but I can only assume that after so many iterations made from the original Sile stockset there is going to be a minor flaw somewhere. The magazine is my homemade Parker Hale clone...
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Shamu
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Logo Designer / Donating Member Joined: April 25 2007 Location: MD, USA. Status: Offline Points: 20510 |
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Posted: May 13 2022 at 10:44am |
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A suggestion if I may. Check out the angle between the front of the butt socket & the rear of the forend. It may be a trick of the light but it seems to have bottom contact but a gap towards the top? You need full contact over 85% of the surface. This is the biggest cause of beaten up draws. They are supposed to "draw" (force) the stock up & back as you tighten the main screw. Otherwise the draws take the firing shock, not the rear of the stock.
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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)
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Goosic
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Joined: September 12 2017 Location: Phoenix Arizona Status: Offline Points: 8842 |
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Posted: May 13 2022 at 1:06pm |
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As far as the forend goes. There is is 100% contact where the bottom of the action rests. The King Screw has been tightened to 30 inch pounds. It has a hung trigger so the cross screw has been tightened to 18 inch pounds against the trigger block.
In an earlier post I mentioned that I've actually fired this rifle without the forend in place. With or without the forend makes no difference in point of impact out to 100 yards.
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Shamu
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Logo Designer / Donating Member Joined: April 25 2007 Location: MD, USA. Status: Offline Points: 20510 |
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Posted: May 13 2022 at 1:55pm |
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I'm thinking of the rear face, where it contacts the front face of the butt socket, not the bottom. That is where the recoil forces are taken from the metal to the wood.
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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)
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jshaf00
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Joined: October 14 2018 Location: Kansas USA Status: Offline Points: 51 |
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Posted: June 13 2022 at 2:42pm |
The 2 work horses on the ranch :![]() |
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jshaf00
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Joined: October 14 2018 Location: Kansas USA Status: Offline Points: 51 |
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Posted: June 13 2022 at 2:48pm |
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jshaf00
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Joined: October 14 2018 Location: Kansas USA Status: Offline Points: 51 |
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Posted: June 13 2022 at 2:52pm |
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scottz63
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Joined: November 08 2021 Location: Mid Mo Status: Offline Points: 829 |
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Posted: June 14 2022 at 4:09am |
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Nice!
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14EH AIT Instructor-PATRIOT Fire Control Enhanced Operator/Maintainer
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Enfield trader
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Joined: May 11 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 923 |
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Posted: June 14 2022 at 4:36am |
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Nice early cocking pieces
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jshaf00
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Posted: June 14 2022 at 7:55am |
Both are 1943 vintage savage #4 mk1* both with near mint 2 groove barrels. it was a shame someone had cut them down really. found both at a pawn shop stuck in a corner covered in dust. no one wanted them. cleaned em up dressed em up and put them to good use. |
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Goosic
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Joined: September 12 2017 Location: Phoenix Arizona Status: Offline Points: 8842 |
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Posted: June 14 2022 at 7:59am |
I have those early button style cocking pieces because I simply cannot grip the later ones comfortably and reliably enough. The Maltby is my go to hunting rig and I feel it necessary to have reliable manual cocking just in case...
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