My new (old) SMLE aiming stand

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I had an interesting day on Saturday. I was asked to come along with a friend to take a look at an estate collection that was being sold. My friend is a gunsmith and leans on me for my very narrow and limited knowledge of milsurps.
Sadly, the bulk of the collection up for sale wasn't worth what the asking price was. A lot of badly sported stuff, cut down, drilled, milled etc. He had said that he had an Enfield 1931 #4 ?????. Trials rifle he might mean? It turned out to be in fact an early trials #4 receiver that had been used to make up a #4. I might have been interested but the receiver had been milled in one spot to accept a civilian scope mount. It had a mixed bag of parts and non matching. I might have taken it just because but the price was way too high.
So, I bought the aiming stand it was sitting in. A CDN Mk3. Paid $200 for it and am glad to have it. The photo isn't of mine but same thing in great shape. It has a weld on one of the arms and I believe it was modified to fit the FN C1.
 
Where was the receiver milled on the trials No4?

Left side towards the breech end. The milled section looked as though it would fit the military issue front pad and some marks where the rear pad would fit. but I saw the mount and it wasn't like any military issued I have seen. And I don't believe they would have gone to the trouble to mill out the receiver on a put together rifle for any other good reason. The trials receivers were used as they had a shorteage of newer parts and I believe this one had an "A" suffix. It's a puzzle to me
 
I saw a '31 troop trials rifle that had been converted into a single shot .222 sporting rifle. Altered receiver, restocked, the whole 9 yards.
Some 31s were converted to "T"s, but you would have spotted that.
 
I didn't think they had converted any of the trials to "Ts". Hmmmm. Did I pass something up here. There was no T mark but then I believe that not all were stamped as such.
 
Points i was thinking of the milled section at the rear behind the safety which would have indicated it might be a No1 MkVI but not by the sounds. Yes , they did indeed convert some of the trials No4s to snipers but none of the MkVIs & when either a trials No4 or a trials was converted to a T or a No1 MkVI was reworked into a No4 the A prefix was changed to a A suffix to indicate the rifle has some parts that are not interchangable with standard No4 parts without some hand fitting
 
Points i was thinking of the milled section at the rear behind the safety which would have indicated it might be a No1 MkVI but not by the sounds. Yes , they did indeed convert some of the trials No4s to snipers but none of the MkVIs & when either a trials No4 or a trials was converted to a T or a No1 MkVI was reworked into a No4 the A prefix was changed to a A suffix to indicate the rifle has some parts that are not interchangable with standard No4 parts without some hand fitting

And by the way. It was dated 1931. These trials are a bit beyond what I have delved into. I need to read up a bit more tonight.
 
And by the way. It was dated 1931. These trials are a bit beyond what I have delved into. I need to read up a bit more tonight.

My No1 MkVI is dated 1930 but i dont know if they were made into 1931, trials No4s were 1931 on iirc
A link to a Trials No4 survey http://www.milsurps.com/showthread.php?t=50282
My MkVI markings
MkVIfour.jpg
 
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