BADGER pointed out something that I noticed in the OPs first post. The Barrel is marked "Savage-Lee Enfield?" In 55 years of gun collecting, I have never seen one marked "Savage-Lee Enfield" that was originally made that way, unless someone has done it later. That does not mean that such a barrel exists, but rather, "Was it original that way from the Factory?"
Savage made Number 4 Lee Enfields can readily be identified by the Square S on the receiver, the "U.S. Government Property" and the serial number and ordinance acceptance mark.
We need pictures of the actual rifle, overall and close up, especially any markings on the Barrel and Receiver. Descriptions are only an opinion of one person, and what is "Excellent" to one is "Good" to another.
In actual Gun Collecting, there can be two identical rifles, made by the same factory, in the same shape, but one can be worth $300 and the other worth $1000 due to a set of markings, association with a Historical person or Regiment, Organization, or other factors. Without good pictures, giving an opinion as to the worth of a rifle is almost useless.
The serial number on a Savage Lee Enfield can also help, as to when it was made. Savage Serial numbers are a combination of numbers and the letter "C" in combination. For example 12C1234, with numbers being before the "C" and numbers being after the "C". If you can give us the FIRST PART of the serial number, before and including the "C", that will help. It can be in the form if we use the example above 12C###x.
Lets have some pictures, because without them, anything else is speculation.
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