here are the metal endcaps just before the second round of beltsandering, they have been fitted and hammered into the correct profile. It took about 4 hours total time to make them look like this.
I shoud mention the wood has about 8 coats of BLO rubbed in with a cotton rag
then a little work to cut the hole out of the to guard and some cold blue. You might also notice that the ones I made are slightly shorter then the standard caps. Well thats because I eas eyeballing the wood when I did the cuts and thought to myself.... self... lets make this a little shorter and trim it to the proper lenght after... well I forgot to trim it

but its my project and I can do what I want. The caps are at the proportional lenght to the total lenght
I still have to decide how I'm going to pin/rivit them to the wood, I'll need some pins to keep the forward barrel band in place.
And finally here it is next to a normal enfield and an SKS
the barrel is 21 1/2" on my shortered enfield about 3 1/4" shorter then the standard enfield
Now I think I need to name it, and tanker is not my first choice.
In the days before the ShtLE (No1 enfield) there were the long infantry rifles and carbines for the calvary, and in the metford rifles there were artillary and engineer carbine and a sergants carbine.
BSA before WW1 made carbines "for officers use" and "trade pattern" with 19" barrels. These wer still the days when officers were required to buy all their own kit.
So I think this will be my Enfield No4 officers pattern carbine
Now to get some smaller metal stamps
and I'm getting low on spare parts