You have to look at all those American gun magazines from the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s to understand. American writers, mostly, came out of the military, where they were taught that the Amurrican US Springfield Rifle, M-1903, Caliber .30M1906, was the best thing since sliced bread. Not only that, it was the finest, best, most accurate rifle in the world, bar none.
Even the 1903A3 was relegated to second-class status. The M-1917, a FAR better rifle, was not even discussed. The ONLY foreign rifle that got ANY decent press was the 1898 Mauser and that for the very good reason that it was already well-known that Springfield had tried to rip Mauser off.... and ended up paying 10,000 ounces of gold to Mauser for the rights to use the '98 design patents.... which Springfield went on to "improve". (Insert here the Krag cocking-piece and firing pin and that silly safety lug which stood up and out far too far.)
Earlier Mausers such as the 1889, 1890, 1891, 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896 (ALL of which used ####-on-closing) obviously HAD to have been inferior because (a) they were earlier, and (2) the USA had not adopted that design, therefore it was grossly inferior.
Lee-Enfields were tolerated by a FEW writers when it was known that James Paris Lee was an AMERICAN (born in Scotland, raised in Canada did all his early desgn work in Canada) but they, also, were terribly inferior.
But that's all propaganda.
In actual FACT, ####-on-closing is faster, easier, contributes to a bolt design and operating protocol which is lightning-quick and is actually safer. The British considered it a safety factor in rifle design, hence KEEPING the ####-on-closing feature when they designed what they thought would be the perfect rifle: the P.-'14.
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