lol that horrid thing. Another Sir Sam Hughes project.Was it the ross shovel that was also ‘legend’?
Good read. Along with "The Emma Gees". - danA Rifleman went to war by Herbert W. McBride
Have a copy of that, got me interested enough in Ross rifles to buy a few to try out. Down to one now, a sporter in 280 Ross. Doesn't get shot much these days. - danWhen I had a Ross rifle a friend of mine loaned me a book titled "The Ross Rifle Story" 1984 by by Roger F. Phillips, Francis Dupuis and John Chadwick. It was quite interesting and listed instances of failures including when soldiers had to pound on the bolt handle with their bayonet to get the bolt open.
Unfortunately I think it's out of print and the prices for used ones run into the hundreds of dollars.
funny they are the only two rifles i can think of off the top of my head that had such crap reputations due to ammunition.Similar to the M16 in Vietnam, improper ammo caused the rifles to function poorly.
Most countries tend to make sure to issue firearms with ammo that will work with them. I imagine most isolated instances where ammo wasn’t working they tended to figure out.funny they are the only two rifles i can think of off the top of my head that had such crap reputations due to ammunition.
The second issue is that segmented bolt of Ross Mk III had MAJOR heat treatment problems.
The Army then made things worse by establishing a program to re heat-treat bolts while waiting for new ones (hopefully properly heat treated) to be shipped from Canada.
They gauge temperature by colour; however, ambient light and in-experienced workers are not a recipe for success.
It doesn’t help when your high quality ammo is being sent to the machine guns and lower quality ammo being substituted instead.From my understanding the Ross was meant to be a "marksman" rifle more than a standard infantry rifle. Sir Ross wanted the Canadian Military to be an "elite" force where each man would fire one or two rounds and score hits compared to hundreds the British would fire with their Lee Enfields to maybe score one hit. Thus why the tolerances of the Ross were so tight. Canada couldn't keep up with ammo production and British made crap ammo along with mud doesn't make good bedfellows with a rifle like that.
The macadam?lol that horrid thing. Another Sir Sam Hughes project.
I could not for the life of me remember the name. It’s the MacAdam Shield Shovel.
Yes Sam Hughes’ secretary patented it, Ms Ena MacAdam. Pg 444 in The Ross Rifle StoryThe macadam?
Does anyone know of any memoirs describing first hand the Ross’ failures as a combat rifle?
Obviously, when your rifle fails mid battle it reduces your chances of survival significantly, but surely some of these men would have been taken prisoner or otherwise survived and later written about the experience?
Hi BN. The LC stamped on top of the breach stands for Large Chamber (to SMLE standards of .464). The stamp was applied after the chamber was reamed. The modification was done in the U.K. Ross factory stamped an E on top of the chamber which stands for "enlarged" pattern. On some of the Ross short rifles that found their way to England with the CEF theyI have read the same thing multiple times and from different sources, although they all may hve been secondary sources. The reason for the factory "LC" modification and the "EC" field modification. Might have those two acronyms reversed, but believe they are correct.
1917 Enfields out of the Eddystone plant had simular issues. Heat treating done by sight rather than measurement. - danEarly springfields have a similar problem heat treating at the factory. Overheated receivers were too brittle. Wasn’t a Ross specific problem. More of a quality control issue rather than a design isse.



























