168bergersapper
Regular
- Location
- Vancouver Island
Can anyone explain to me the difference in bolt head sizes and when or why they were used? Thanks in advance.
0 is the shortest, but they would have left the factory with whatever made that bolt work in that rifle. they made bolts and dumped them in a box, and somewhere else the receiver and barrel were made and chambered etc then someone sat with bolts and bolt heads and a gauge to get them all fitted. after that an oiled round was fired to set the lugs properly, and headspace checked again. then they would be numbered together and set to kill the hunSo would "0" be the shortest and therefore what they started from the factory with or vice versa?
At one time, I used to check the headspace on Lee Enfields by placing various sizes of shim stock between the bolt face and the base of a .303 British case in the chamber. Depending on the thickness required to make the bolt face fit tight to the chambered shell, I used to silver solder a piece of stainless shim stock to the face of the bolt, usually about 1 or 2 thousands thinner and corrected headspace in this manner. A lot of people used to "poo poo" my so called fix for excessive headspace but I never had a single problem and some of these guns were fired a lot after I did this work. Also allowed better accuracy and sometimes improved magazine feeding. I would be interested in hearing what knowledgeable gunsmiths thought of this idea. Thanks in advance. Jack
New bolt head sizes were to fall into the follow lengths.
0 - .620 to .625 in.
1 - .625 to .630 in.
2 - .630 to .635 in.
3 - .635 to .640 in.
At the top of milsurp page is a sticky "Lee Enfield On-line Knowledge Libraries (Index of Articles)" with all the Enfield information you could possibly need.
Below are the 1991 Canadian No.4 Enfield manuals, they are written to keep your Enfield rifles serviceable and are easy to understand.
1991 No.4 (All Marks) .303 Rifle Manuals (Complete Set)
http://www.milsurps.com/content.php?r=335-1991-No.4-(All-Marks)-.303-Rifle-Manuals-(Complete-Set)
Military headspace is .064 minimum and .074 maximum, your Canadian manual tells you to select the smallest bolt head that will not close on the .074 headspace gauge. What is important is bolt head over rotation, (see manual below) than having tighter headspace. Even at the longest headspace of .074 all you need to do is fire form your cases and let them headspace on the shoulder and not the rim. And then only neck size your cases for longer case life.
1991 No.4 (All Marks) .303 Rifle Maintenance Instructions
http://photos.imageevent.com/badgerdog/generalstorage/edhortonmanuals/No4Mk1Arm.pdf
Because of the age and lack of spare parts the Canadian manual is more lenient than the original "Instructions for Armours" and a must have manual for any Enfield owner. Now all you people have to do is read all the free information in the "Lee Enfield On-line Knowledge Libraries".
NOTE: If your are measuring used bolt heads the numbers mean nothing, and when new the bolt head numbers were to fall into the range printed above.
With use the bolt head and bolt became shorter, and why new bolt were fitted to bring the rifle back into headspace limits. If a new bolt and #3 bolt head were fitted and the rifle failed the .074 gauge the receiver lug recesses were worn beyond use and the reciever was scrapped and the rifle parted out.
Most if not all the size difference between used and new bolt heads of the same number is in the threaded section of the bolt as this is the part that would compress or setback the most, I never bothered to measure this part of the bolt head.
I have also seen and measured lots of bolt bodies from the back of the rear locking lug to the front of the bolt without a head installed and found none seem the same in length (some much longer than others). It was common for the bolt bodies and bolt locking lug to compress slightly with use also, not just the bolt head threads which would pretty much stop compressing when the back of the bolt head butted up flush with the bolt body mouth.
The military EME armorer techs would also often recycle bolt bodies by grinding off the old serial number and reusing them on other rifles then re-stamp the matching serial number of the rifle.
I have seen many Lee Enfields that have been re-barreled many times with little or no receiver lug recesses that were worn out (maybe some set back, but more often flattened bolt lugs) and never seen one that needed scraping because of it (not saying it does not happen). If a longer bolt body and head could not fix excessive head space, just removing a turn off the barrel and rechambering it would.
I also found this chart from another website forum that measured 220 No.4 bolt heads that seems to match my experiences with LE bolt head sizes -
As can be seen some are way outside of their respective size range by bolt head number (especially longer ones) that can not be taken as a case of compression from use.
wow so much great info!!
I am restoring a long branch sporter with new wood and new manufacture replacement barrel. Would fitting this barrel to a new/old stock bolt head be advisable? Or just go with the no.2 bolt head currently on the bolt?
wow so much great info!!
I am restoring a long branch sporter with new wood and new manufacture replacement barrel. Would fitting this barrel to a new/old stock bolt head be advisable? Or just go with the no.2 bolt head currently on the bolt?