sunray
This is the second time in this forum in the past two days you have stepped in your own fecal debris, I have ammunition manuals from the British MOD Pattern Room library from WWII stating Winchester made .303 ammunition loaded with double base ball powders, it further states that this Winchester ammunition like Cordite ammunition is not to be used in machine guns. Winchester loaded Olin ball powder in WWII .303 ammunition and in 1947 Bruce E. Hodgdon sold this powder as BLC2 as one of his surplus powders.
"In the opening days of World War II, a chemist friend of Bruce E. Hodgdon was casually reminiscing about World War I. He mentioned the quantities of surplus smokeless powder the military had dumped at sea after the war; and speculated how useful that would have been to handloaders struggling through the Great Depression. He anticipated a similar surplus powder situation might occur after World War II. Hodgdon began investigating availability of surplus powder when the war ended; and sales to handloaders began in 1946. One of the first powders he found was 4895 used for loading .30-06 Springfield service ammunition. In 1947, he began acquisition of 80 tons of spherical powder salvaged from disassembled .303 British military rifle cartridges manufactured in the United States. By 1949, he was marketing the powder as BL type C. The C was to indicate the powder burned "cooler" than traditional Improved Military Rifle (IMR) powders. In 1949, he began acquisition of powder salvaged from disassembled Oerlikon 20mm cannon cartridges. This powder resembled IMR 4350 in appearance, and with a slower burning rate, was initially marketed as "4350 Data", and later as 4831."
Hodgdon Powder Company
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hodgdon_Powder_Company
Magnum type primers are used with military double base ball powders due to the deterrent coating on the powder used to slow the burning rate and make it burn cooler.
CCI No. 34 and No. 41 MILITARY RIFLE PRIMERS
Military-style semi-auto rifles seldom have firing pin retraction springs. If care is not used in assembling ammunition, a “slam-fire” can occur before the bolt locks. The military arsenals accomplish this using different techniques and components—including different primer sensitivity specifications—from their commercial counterparts. CCI makes rifle primers for commercial sale that matches military sensitivity specs that reduce the chance of a slam-fire when other factors go out of control*. If you’re reloading for a military semi-auto, look to CCI Military primers.
Features and Benefits
* Mil-spec sensitivity
* Initiator mix optimized for ball/spherical propellants
*Available in large (No.34) and small (No. 41) rifle
* Use the same data as CCI Magnum primers
http://www.cci-ammunition.com/products/primers/primers.aspx?id=30
sunray, people come to forums to ask questions and get the right answers and your answers sunray are way off the mark. I would be more than a little embarrassed to have an American know more about the British Enfield rifle and its ammunition if I were British.(or from Londinium)
You need to spend more time doing research and less time posting the wrong answers.