Generally speaking if the nose cap isn’t listed it isn’t matching. About 7-8 years ago when restoring Enfields was the rage to be able to get a cheap ‘full wood’ example (rifles were 100-200$, stocks were about 50-200$) a rifle with all matching parts (or all matching parts that were there) was the desired example to restore. Most who did the ‘restoring’ were just slapping wood on the rifle and calling it done. Obviously not the right way to do things but it was what most did.
Louthepou on here (hope I wrote his name right) restored many correctly and did a amazing job by all accounts.
If the seller is asking top price and can’t prove its a premium example, I would move on. Plenty of fish in the sea.
I really hate to disagree with this because most of it is true.
However, after WWI, every nation involved and even some that weren't picked up these rifles off the battlefields, from left over storage depots, surplus sales, you name it.
The rifles came from different manufacturers from UK/AUSTRALIA/INDIA
The Brits made sure that all of these rifles, other than the one offs from the Khyber, had parts that could be interchanged, with little or no hand fitting.
When other nations, such as Turkey/Italy/Austria/Holland and many others adopted these rifles for first line or secondary use they often stripped unrepairable rifles for useable parts and didn't bother to sort them out by manufacturer or nationality.
The Australians lost thousands of Lithgow produced rifles at Galipoli and the Turks put those rifles into service. Even converted some of them to 8x57 Frankenmausers.
Are the rifles that were FTRed or repaired by those nations uncollectable or incorrect??? Not IMHO.
I've had unmolested, completely original factory No1 rifles dating from the mid 1890s to new made Indian rifles, which I believe are still being made/issued to this very day.
They're fantastic firearms and a joy to handle.
There are very few of these rifles that haven't seen some sort of repairs from minor bits to being stripped down to their individual components, compeletely refinished, all necessary parts replaced.
IMHO 99% of the rifles out there have gone through some sort of repair process and in most instances, the replacement or repaired parts did not come from the same manufacturers.
Lots of the parts on these rifles were not made up by the company stamped on the butt socket. The manufacture of those parts were contracted to small producers of such things.
It's sort of like demanding that a Garand M1 have all matching parts from the same manufacturer. It happened but wasn't the norm.