I have a 1944 Long Branch Lee Enfield, No. 4 Mark I*, that looks to me to be in good condition, few dings in the stock, rifling looks OK. It's the only milsurp rifle I have, and probably the only one I would have, but I feel it's a part of Toronto history and I was looking for a rifle that would make a good wall hanger. So that's it. But I'm otherwise a complete beginner wrt Lee Enfield rifles, and milsurp in general. So I have a few practical questions, and please go easy on me:
1 - Where can I buy cheap .303 british? It's a buck a around. I know, "reload", but until then, is it possible to do better than a buck a round? I can only find what amount to high quality hunting rounds whereas I will be target shooting
2 - A checklist of stuff I should do to make sure the rifle is and stays in good condition? Basic care that might be different than the usual cleaning for a modern rifle? In particular, should I be soaking the stock in linseed oil? What else?
3 - Having taken it to the range just once, I can say that it shoots pretty far off the mark. Presumably in part I need to zero the rifle, at least for windage. Do I need to go buy one of those lee-enfield front site drift tools? Or is there some other way? And are there other things I should do to improve accuracy before I start trying to sight in? I am not interested in doing a massive amount of work to accurize, but I will do some basic things if there's stuff I should be doing.
In other words, just looking for some basic pointers on how to get started, what's the most important thing I should be doing, etc., being completely new to this platform and to caring for ancient wood lol.
1 - Where can I buy cheap .303 british? It's a buck a around. I know, "reload", but until then, is it possible to do better than a buck a round? I can only find what amount to high quality hunting rounds whereas I will be target shooting
2 - A checklist of stuff I should do to make sure the rifle is and stays in good condition? Basic care that might be different than the usual cleaning for a modern rifle? In particular, should I be soaking the stock in linseed oil? What else?
3 - Having taken it to the range just once, I can say that it shoots pretty far off the mark. Presumably in part I need to zero the rifle, at least for windage. Do I need to go buy one of those lee-enfield front site drift tools? Or is there some other way? And are there other things I should do to improve accuracy before I start trying to sight in? I am not interested in doing a massive amount of work to accurize, but I will do some basic things if there's stuff I should be doing.
In other words, just looking for some basic pointers on how to get started, what's the most important thing I should be doing, etc., being completely new to this platform and to caring for ancient wood lol.




















































