Someone told me only longbranch used the grooved handgaurd. I don't see longbranch stamped in the receiver anywhere unless it is covered with suncorite.
All the manufacturers used grooved handguards at one point or another. It came down to what the next basket held in terms of handguard design. That was much the same for various other parts, as they became available. This was due to changes in the allowed variation from the "master" rifle (Mk1,Mk2,Mk3,MK4 rear sight for example), and due to manufacturing ease and time.
As for the maker, here is a quote from Ian Skennerton's website. Bold is me
No.4 and No.5 rifle serial numbers can readily identify manufacturers. British No.4 rifles have five numbers, usually after one or two letter prefixes. The same letter prefix(es) were used by Maltby, Fazakerley & BSA Shirley, A to Z then AA, AB to AZ, then BA to BZ, CA to CZ &c. Maltby rifle serial numbers commence with a number '1', Fazakerley with a '2' and Shirley with a '3', e.g. 1###x for Maltby, 2###x for Fazakerley and for Shirley, 3###x, after the letter prefix. Late Shirley numbers then supposedly ran A4000 to A7999 and with PS prefixes at the very end of production. Post-war Fazakerley No.4 rifles had PF letter prefixes. The only exception to the 5-number sequence for No.4 rifles was the initial BSA Shirley production which ran from 0001 to 9999 then went with A to Z prefixes (A0001 to A9999 to the Z prefix) and some early dual letter prefixes (e.g. AT 0303), but then went over to A30001, &c. So early M47C No.4 rifle numbers could be confused with the Jungle carbine in having four rather than five numbers.
Long Branch (Canada) serial numbers incorporate an 'L' in the serial number while US Savage numbers include an 'C' in a similar relative position amongst the numbers. Both of these No.4 rifle series commenced with 0L1 and 0C1 respectively
So with yours being a '41, that is probably why there is only a single letter prefix. (Production of No4's only began in '41)







































































