.303 British (not a Lee Enfield)

There is quite a bit of information in "The History of Remington Firearms" by Roy Marcot (ISBN 1-59288-690-9). Remington carried on in 1921 to build Model 30 sporting rifles using left over parts from M-1917s. The last variants of this model were in 1940, followed by Model 720s. Remington also made the model of 1934 in 7mm Mauser from M1917 parts, but to fit a Springfield bayonet. 500 were made in 1934 and 2500 in 1935 for Honduras.
 
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I have quite a few of these rifles, sporterised in calibers from the originals up to 475 Ackley. They make good magnum rifles if you're willing/able to do the work yourself. Expensive if you can't. Still, good rifles. Eddystones have some heat treating issues, which usually don't manifest themselves until you try and take the barrel off. Tough sledding there! The later versions with the filled "fishpond" below the rear sight are slightly easier to work with, but they all make a good rifle. I hadn't thought of the value vs. gold before, interesting idea. - dan
 
--- Two of the Finest, well made, accurate rifles manufactured, in my opinion and still going Strong !!

:agree:
Most accurate .30-06 I ever owned, my own bubbaing of a Winchester P-17. And more accurate than any of the several .308s I've owned as well.

And I believe that Remington's first bolt action, Model 30 (?), was based on their tooling for the .30-06 P-17.
 
I was looking at my p-14 again last night and finally found what I think is the date stamp. '16 (1916 I'm guessing) I missed it before because it has a bunch of smithing stamps all around it. I also found, on the front sight, to the right of the blade the # 14. I'm guessing because it is a P-14.
 
I rather doubt that the P-14 was being made in July of 1918. Problem here is two almost-identical rifles, each with a serial number range starting at 1 in each of 3 different plants. It is possible to assemble a "set" of 6 rifles with the SAME serial number!

Well according to info I've found suggests that my serial number on my ERA was made in July of 1918. Lowes Certified Guns site has the story of Eddystone, author suggests that rifles were still in production until January of 1919 when the plant ceased to operate. Winchester continued on until April of 1919.


Winchester and Remington produced close to 1,000 rifles a day of each type during the contracts while Eddystone actually got ramped up all the way to FOUR THOUSAND rifles a day, plus spare parts. For a plant that hadn't made a single rifle only a couple of years before, this is VERY impressive.

Production actually got up to 6000 rifles per day. with over 1.9 million produced with parts for another 200,000.
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I have a .303 British ERA. I Was talking to a gunsmith not long ago that told me they made them in 2 cals. .303 and 30.06. Identical firearms except in cal and designation. I might have this part wrong so help me out here.... the .303 is called a P-15 and the 30.06 is called a M-17.
Any knowledge in this area would be greatfully recieved. The one I have is sporterized but I have my eye on a fully furnished one. Are they rare as I have never seen any other than these 2, and you never read about them on here. I tried a thread search but never have any luck.
I hope to get some good feedback here so thanks in advance. Brad
here is a picture of p17 and p14 the one at bottom is P14 .
awessome rifles , the 17 is a nail driver even with my tired eyes aand the 14 isnt bad iether
DSCI1123.jpg
 
here is a picture of p17 and p14 the one at bottom is P14 .
awessome rifles , the 17 is a nail driver even with my tired eyes aand the 14 isnt bad iether
DSCI1123.jpg

You have some beautiful old girls there Ianwd. The P14 I have has been sporterized so it doesn't look that nice but she is still special!
 
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