It was made by Birmingham Small Arms (Shirley) in 1943. The broad arrow marking is a British army acceptance mark.
Is there any specific you would like to know or any info in general?
check out this site for more info..
h ttp://www.milsurps.com/index.php?
Take any of the parts you see rust on (namely the front band that I can see) and give it a soak in vinegar to clean it up.
Soaking in vinegar will remove the bluing, no?
Take any of the parts you see rust on (namely the front band that I can see) and give it a soak in vinegar to clean it up.
Looks good, lots of character in that wood!
Nice looking No.4, treat her furniture to several coats of Linseed oil, remember that wood is over 70 years old , and can dry out, leading to spliting and cracks,
That rifle must have missed the large Factory Through Repair program, that the Brits had after the war, large quanitities of No.4 rifles were upgraded to having the trigger brazed to the reciever, rather than hung off the trigger guard, and micrometer sights added
Thanks for the reply, just info in general (specially on the markings). The trigger guard not a standard one.