LE no1mkiii into 45-70

What is the damned crack, and why do I need plug screws. I did manage to get a sling swivel rear and front with band. I just need woods and the front sight thing, my front sight has some weird tin thing added around the sight post.


why does full wood help with accuracy?
 
You use plug screws to plug up the holes from when the ifle was drilled and tapped......unless you want to use a scope on it.

The Damned Crack is the crack that develops over time at the rear end of the forestock on many Lee-Enfield rifles. It accounts for MUCH of the poor shooting that people experience with these rifles. A Lee-Enfield with a good barrel is nearly always capable of 1.5 MOA or better. If your rifle shoots 6-inch groups at 100, likely you have The Damned Crack. Just something to watch out for. A sure inication is when a rifle suddenly starts shooting very badly.

The rifle has a very light barrel. It was designed to have a full stock to house and support this barrel. When the wood was cu to mak the rifle into a sporter, it left the barrel hanging out in mid-air and waving around when the rifle is fired. For best accuracy, it wants support at 3 points, one of which is no longer there. It needs suport at the chamber, at the Middle Band and at the Muzzle. Sportered rifles no longer have the Muzzle support.

I have here a 1918 NRF Lee-Enfield which is absolutely untouched. With my test loads, it shoots exactly 1 inch at 100 yards, off the sandbags, iron sights. Pretty decent for a 93-year-old rifle. I also have a 1918 Lithgow which needed the stock worked over (it had The Damned Crack); from shooting a 14-inch group at 100 yards, it now shoots just half an inch. No scope, but a lot of sandbags. Your rifle ought to shoot very well; if it doesn't, then there is something wrong and now you have an idea on how to start fixing it.
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hmmm having tons of woodworking tools at hand, i wonder if I could make a one piece stock/ upper handguard. if i could get the rear sight off, then slide the barrel in then put rear sight back on..... sounds tricky, bed it all in with bedding compound? sigh, maybe those woods came down in price.
 
There is a monster shipment of original wood in Canada right now. Some should be ready to hit the market fairly soon.

I don't think removing the rear sight to stock the rifle would be practical. The sight itself would be no real problem, but the rear-sight BASE is big enough to mess up this idea...... and it fits AROUND the barrel before it is pinned in place.
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