stickhunter
CGN frequent flyer
- Location
- Victoria, B.C.
I'd like your opinion about the following situation...
Suppose you have two Savage-made Lee-Enfield No4's, both in very good mechanical condition with excellent bores.
Rifle #1 is in full military configuration with everything matching and Savage-marked except:
- the bolt is a Long Branch
- the rear sight is a Faz-produced MkI
- there is an importer's mark electro-penciled as tastefully as possible on the receiver
Rifle #1 has Union of South Africa markings, but you don't know its provenance (e.g., whether the bolt mismatch was done by the importer or an armourer).
Rifle #2 has sporterized stocks with matching bolt and uncut barrel except:
- the front sight protector and barrel bands are missing
- the magazine is missing
As it stands, you have two rifles, neither of which are in their original as-produced condition, but with Rifle #1 perhaps having an interesting history and possibly field-replaced parts.
Question:
Do you leave these rifles as-is or do you move the wood, metal fittings, and magazine from Rifle #1 in order to desporterize Rifle #2. The end result would be Rifle #1 becoming a parts gun and Rifle #2 being returned to nearly-original Savage-produced configuration. In one hand, you've removed/destroyed the history of Rifle #1, but on the other you've righted a previous transgression done to Rifle #2.
I would have no hesitation using the parts from Rifle #1 if I knew it had been bubba'd by a civilian, but it wouldn't be so straightforward to me if the mismatching had been done while the rifle was in service.
What would you do?
Suppose you have two Savage-made Lee-Enfield No4's, both in very good mechanical condition with excellent bores.
Rifle #1 is in full military configuration with everything matching and Savage-marked except:
- the bolt is a Long Branch
- the rear sight is a Faz-produced MkI
- there is an importer's mark electro-penciled as tastefully as possible on the receiver
Rifle #1 has Union of South Africa markings, but you don't know its provenance (e.g., whether the bolt mismatch was done by the importer or an armourer).
Rifle #2 has sporterized stocks with matching bolt and uncut barrel except:
- the front sight protector and barrel bands are missing
- the magazine is missing
As it stands, you have two rifles, neither of which are in their original as-produced condition, but with Rifle #1 perhaps having an interesting history and possibly field-replaced parts.
Question:
Do you leave these rifles as-is or do you move the wood, metal fittings, and magazine from Rifle #1 in order to desporterize Rifle #2. The end result would be Rifle #1 becoming a parts gun and Rifle #2 being returned to nearly-original Savage-produced configuration. In one hand, you've removed/destroyed the history of Rifle #1, but on the other you've righted a previous transgression done to Rifle #2.
I would have no hesitation using the parts from Rifle #1 if I knew it had been bubba'd by a civilian, but it wouldn't be so straightforward to me if the mismatching had been done while the rifle was in service.
What would you do?
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