Reviving the Lee-Enfield: Restoration specialist attends Moose Jaw gun show

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Reviving the Lee-Enfield: Restoration specialist attends Moose Jaw gun show​

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MOOSE JAW — In a quiet workshop packed with rifle parts, aged wood, and metal components, Stuart Hardcastle and his son spend their time bringing history back to life.

Hardcastle, a resident of Regina, Sask. since emigrating to Canada in 1965, dedicates his free time to restoring Lee-Enfield rifles, an iconic firearm used by British and Commonwealth forces throughout the 20th century. His latest visit to Moose Jaw was during the South Sask. Wildlife Federation’s gun show at the Moose Jaw Exhibition Grounds recently.

Hardcastle is originally from Yorkshire, England, and began collecting rifles at 11 years old.

“I was in the cadets in England when I started, and that was the first time I held the Lee-Enfield No. 1, Mark 3,” he recalled. “They didn’t give me a uniform until I was 13, but I could still join.”

His passion never faded. Over four decades, he has collected, restored, and studied hundreds of Lee-Enfields, particularly those manufactured in Canada at the Long Branch Arsenal in Long Branch, Ont.

“I did this for the history part of it, you know, especially for the Long Branches,” he said. “The Long Branch Lee-Enfields are made in Canada, just north of Toronto… and Long Branch made more Lee-Enfields than anybody else put together.”

During the Second World War, the Long Branch Arsenal produced approximately 910,000 Lee-Enfield No. 4 rifles. By comparison, publicly available data shows that the Royal Ordnance Factories (ROF) — one of the primary weapon factories in England — notably ROF Maltby, produced just over 737,000 rifles in the same period.

Hardcastle now has an extensive inventory that has taken over his two-car garage, including restored and dismantled rifles, assorted metal receivers, bolts, barrels, and magazines, and bits and pieces of scrap Beech, Walnut, and Birch wood.

The restored rifles are disassembled, fitted with new wood, and checked for wear. Key parts like springs and ejectors are replaced, bolts are re-blued, and barrels are polished. The rifle is then glass-beaded, coated with a durable flat black finish, and reassembled. Glass-beading uses glass beads to clean and smooth metal surfaces.

“We usually buy what’s called sporters… it has all the wood cut, and it’s shortened, so it’s like a European hunting rifle,” he explained. Sporters, or “sporterized” rifles, are military surplus weapons that have been modified for hunting or sporting purposes.

Hardcastle and his son specialize in No. 4 Mark 1 Lee-Enfield rifles, including sniper variants, as well as No. 1 Mark 3, P14, and P17 models.

Each restoration takes about two weeks, though Hardcastle refuses to rush any job to ensure the highest quality with each project.

Among his extensive collection are sniper variants, including rare Mauser models.

“I’ve got a Mauser sniper here. It’s a Turkish Mauser,” he said, pointing to the Waffenamt (German Weapons Agency) stamp on the barrel. “I got this in a box, in bits and pieces, but the only thing that’s not original on this is the mounts….”

While his specialty is Lee-Enfield rifles, Hardcastle enjoys the occasional challenge.

“I’ve stuck to the Enfields (because) that’s what I know, and that’s what I do the best,” he clarified. “That doesn’t mean to say I can’t build these (Mauser, BSA Martini, Parker Hale, and other models), because, obviously, I can do it.”

With an appreciation for history and a steady hand for restoration, Hardcastle’s work ensures that these historic firearms continue to tell their stories for generations to come.

“If we can find the parts, we can restore or refurbish any rifle,” his website reads.

https://www.moosejawtoday.com/local...pecialist-attends-moose-jaw-gun-show-10394496
 
Stuart has work of mine, and I'm glad to see he's back at the workbench. Time for a question about production and delivery.
 
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Tried to sell me an L39 that wasn't. When it became obvious to him that I knew what I was talking about he tried to tell me it was "L39 style". Also overheard him trying to pass off an obvious restoration to another guy as all original.

Would be very careful buying anything from him.
 
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''bolts are re-blued, and barrels are polished. The rifle is then glass-beaded, coated with a durable flat black finish, and reassembled. Glass-beading uses glass beads to clean and smooth metal surfaces.''

Not my idea of a restoration.
 
''bolts are re-blued, and barrels are polished. The rifle is then glass-beaded, coated with a durable flat black finish, and reassembled. Glass-beading uses glass beads to clean and smooth metal surfaces.''

no buba no...
 
Anyone know what sort of prices he charges for basic No.1 and No. 4 rifles? My impression is that there are lots of decent Lee Enfields out there and that auction prices are kind of flat. It would surprise me that there's a market for mix-master builds (pretty as they are) unless he's asking less than what collectible rifles go for. Personally, I think it's a good thing if the availability of rifles like these brings more people into the Lee Enfield fold but I'm pretty sure that in a few weeks I'll be seeing virtually zero interest in the Lee Enfields I put on my table at the Calgary Spring Show.

milsurpo
 
Anyone know what sort of prices he charges for basic No.1 and No. 4 rifles? My impression is that there are lots of decent Lee Enfields out there and that auction prices are kind of flat. It would surprise me that there's a market for mix-master builds (pretty as they are) unless he's asking less than what collectible rifles go for. Personally, I think it's a good thing if the availability of rifles like these brings more people into the Lee Enfield fold but I'm pretty sure that in a few weeks I'll be seeing virtually zero interest in the Lee Enfields I put on my table at the Calgary Spring Show.

milsurpo
In his write it says two weeks of work so I am assuming 80 hrs. That’s not going to be cheap, plus parts. I’d be interested in seeing what his prices actually are.
 
not sure of his prices, but milsurp prices are DEFINITELY dropping. I've been watching several items languish for weeks on GP and the EE that 6 months ago would have sold in hours at the listed prices. Last week, I bought a nice matching un-messed with Australian SMLE at auction for under $600 (plus buyer's fees, shipping, etc.) which is still a lot less than some dealers are still trying to sell Indian refurb mixmasters for.

M38 swedes are now selling under $600 on the EE (which I think is pretty amazing), Garands are not moving over $2K it seems. Mosin 91/30's are back under $600 pretty much consistently.

When we see RC K98k's starting to sell routinely under $1000 (which I think is imminent), the good-ish times will be back.

I think the economy is far worse than the libtards will admit, tariffs are kicking in and stealing jobs, gun bans have been rolling out at a fast tempo, driving people away from the hobby, and the polls all look like Marxx Carnage will get the Libtards re-elected. All of those things decrease gun sale values.
 
Auction prices are NOT flat. They are as retarded as ever. Its amazing how many retards are out there.
Depends on the auction. Switzers is still drawing the dumb prices. The others, not so much.

Switzers is also charging more to buyers and sellers than anyone else. It’s crazy. No idea how they stay so popular.
 
not sure of his prices, but milsurp prices are DEFINITELY dropping. I've been watching several items languish for weeks on GP and the EE that 6 months ago would have sold in hours at the listed prices. Last week, I bought a nice matching un-messed with Australian SMLE at auction for under $600 (plus buyer's fees, shipping, etc.) which is still a lot less than some dealers are still trying to sell Indian refurb mixmasters for.

M38 swedes are now selling under $600 on the EE (which I think is pretty amazing), Garands are not moving over $2K it seems. Mosin 91/30's are back under $600 pretty much consistently.

When we see RC K98k's starting to sell routinely under $1000 (which I think is imminent), the good-ish times will be back.

I think the economy is far worse than the libtards will admit, tariffs are kicking in and stealing jobs, gun bans have been rolling out at a fast tempo, driving people away from the hobby, and the polls all look like Marxx Carnage will get the Libtards re-elected. All of those things decrease gun sale values.
Well, that's not surprising. I may be talking out of my keister, but I don't know many shooters <40 years that like milsurps other than the Sks, especially with the price these days of a lot of those calibers.

I'd probably buy one of his guns if they were re-chambered in a more affordable caliber, because you've already lost any collector value on the gun. 303 is too expensive for my wallet.
 
Switzers is also charging more to buyers and sellers than anyone else. It’s crazy. No idea how they stay so popular.

Well, in my case, it worked for me because Andrew(I think it was Andrew?) showed up at my house to pick up the 8 or 9 rifles, along with boxes of parts and ammunition.
The auction fees were worth it for me instead of spending 700$ on shipping the rifles, trying to find homes for a dozen 20$ gun parts not worth shipping, and a couple of a thousand rounds of various ammo from 9mm to shotgun rounds that I wouldn't have even tried shipping due to cost.

If I were selling one or two small things, yeah not worth it. But he left here with a carload and it cost me an extra 75$ fee for pickup, but allowed me to sell another 2000$ worth of items that I'd just have had kicking around collecting dust for years. I had one rifle sell for like 700$ less than I paid, oh well, but all the rest sold for well more than enough to cover that and more.

So it depends really. Large amounts and large market? Worth it even with fees, for me.
 
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