Picked up my first milsurp

frumpy

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Kingston, ON
Not sure if it's completely considered a milsurp rifle but picked up a sportsterized lee enfield no1 mk3 today. Complete impulse but very happy with it. Mismatch numbers but looks like a good shooter.

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I bought it as I "needed" something to bridge the gap between my 223 and 12ga slugs. I will either use my 12ga or this if I deer hunt this year.
 
Good choice. It will do the job well and reliably and if you drive over it, drop it out of your boat or lose it in the snow, nothing to cry about. What more could one want?
 
@OP:

Your rifle has indeed been sportered, as have so many millions of others.

You can see that.

You know that.

You don't need me to tell you that.

What you have is the remains of the Finest Battle Rifle Ever Produced.... and the capital letters are intentional.

You are lucky in that the Butt has not been Bubba'd, so that whole end of the rifle is fine. And you HAVE the rear upper handguard (which is called the LOWER handguard), so that is one less expensive part to try to find. You are correct in that the barrel has NOT been cut. It appears that your rifle still has the critical Inner Band, Washer, Spring and Screw which are necessary to make the rifle perform as it should. Your rifle is a perfect candidate for restoration.

To restore this rifle you will need:
Rear Sight Protector and Screw (2parts)
Middle (Barrel) Band, screw, sling swivel (3 parts)
Nose Cap (Bayonet Stud and Bar are integral parts with this), its Cross Screw and Screw, the Stud and Spring which bear upward against the barrel (5 more parts)
Upper Handguard
Fore-stock.

These last two are the hard ones to source. Trade-Ex has most of the others, as do half the people on this forum.

As well, there are extras which you WILL want: Bayonet, Scabbard, Frog, Sling, Buttstock Oiler, Pull-through, Wire Gauze, a Bandolier and a handful of Chargers. Forget about spare Magazines; such were never issued and, in fact, it is MUCH faster to reload the rifle with Chargers. Prices on these vary a lot. Generally, a Bayonet with Scabbard and Frog will run the thick end of 100 bucks, Sling perhaps 10, Oiler $5 to $20, depending on if you want Plastic, Bakelite, Steel or Brass, Pull-through maybe $5, Chargers perhaps a buck each, Bandolier likely $5. Trade-Ex has a lot of these things and you can find them in the PARTS section of "Military Surplus Rifles" on the Equipment Exchange.

And you will definitely want a MANUAL. This you can download from the Military Knowledge Library over at milsurps dot om. Click on the STICKIE at the top of the Index to this Forum and it takes you right there.

If you want to restore the old girl, get the parts and then come back on here. There is MORE to it than just slapping the parts on in the right place. That's the bad part. The good part is that it was all worked out very nicely a century ago and there are folks here who will walk you through a restoration.

In the end, you are likely to have a 100-year-old rifle which can down a Moose with 1 round...... or group all of its bullets on a smoke pack at 100 yards, given that you can hold her.

Worth going for?

I think so, anyway.

Hope this helps.
.
 
Getting started in the milsurp world with a sportered Lee Enfield is not a bad thing. Actually it's a really good thing! And as mentioned, even in sporter shape, it's a great, reliable rifle.
 
Restore it, buy some chargers, and come down to the Milsurp shoots at EOHC. Next one is July 14. The Lee Enfields really shine in the Mad Minute; 100 yards, offhand, as many rounds as you can fire in sixty seconds. Just keep on working that wonderful bolt, and every five-six rounds shove another charger into that cavernous magazine...
 
For now I am just planning on shooting it but I'm going to keep my eyes open for the stuff to convert it back. I just grabbed a box of ammo last night for it so will hopefully get to try her our soon. I think I am going to need to start reloading for mad minutes, cheapest I could find here was $25 a box.
 
Frumpy, I'll soon have a good amount of factory .303 to sell for less than what you pay at Canadian Tire, if you plan on driving down to Aylmer let me know, we could meet. No need to loose all your money to feed your new toy :)

Lou
 
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