I likely won't get a chance for any more pictures this week as the owner and I are on opposite shifts this week. I can't imagine him doing a restore himself, but I will run it past him. I will also pass along the warnings about the DP and suggest he maybe get it checked again by another gunsmith since his father had it done last when the firing pin was repaired years ago. From what I've read about the downgrading to DP, it happened for a lot of different reasons, that varied by the era, and the country. Did the armories xray the steel or have any technology that today's gunsmith does not? I am puzzled as to why someone would sport a DP rifle? After looking this rifle over I would guess it got the DP because it was old, worn, and had a broken firing pin. Spent brass looks perfect but maybe I should have been wearing a welding helmet instead of safety glasses. Thanks very much for everyone's help.
Unless your gunsmith is a very very experienced with the SMLE & has all the correct tools & gauges, forget him.
Having the cutoff, rear long range sight and the plate for the long range front sight is helpful.
The front plate has been machined down & has no mount for the arm so is only hole filler.
The so-called 'volley sights' is grenade launch sight. A lot of rifles declared to be not worth fixing got made into grenade launchers. The large disk on the stock is the base for a grenade launch sight. Mind you, most of those have the wire wrapping on the forestock.
Good luck with lobbing a Grenade 2800 yards, you'll need more than just wirewrap to hold that baby together.




















































