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1900 lee enfield bolt differences
1900 lee enfield bolt differences










What they had was the Lee-Enfield and men who knew how to use it. The British did not have enough machine guns to mass in 1914. The British Expeditionary Force shot them to pieces, so much so the Germans thought they were facing massed machine guns. Although small, each man could fire 15 aimed shots in a minute with his SMLE.

1900 lee enfield bolt differences 1900 lee enfield bolt differences

Great Britain's "contemptible little army" of 1914 was one of the best trained force of rifleman the world has ever known. Thus, the Short, Magazine Lee-Enfield made its debut.Īnother lesson the British learned was the value of marksmanship. Outranged cavalry with carbines morphed into mounted infantry with rifles too long to be wieldly from horseback. After being shot to pieces by burghers with clip-loading Mausers in the Anglo-Boer War, the British learned their lesson. Most armies in 1914 had long rifles-think 30" barrels for infantry and short-barreled carbines, sometimes less than 16", for cavalry. The "S" comes from its mid-length barrel. The rifle, although somewhat ugly, had excellent ergonomics and sights well suited for both long-range target work as well as close in snap-shooting. The bolt handle was perfectly placed for easy manipulation, and its stock well design, particularly at the wrist. 303 British cartridge headspaced on the rim, and allowed for some slop, and there was plenty of the latter in the trenches of France and Flanders. And there is plenty of room for dirt, mud and debris to go out of the mechanism when it is cycled. Aside from a Krag-Jorgensen or a mannlicher-shoenauer, there is none smoother. The Lee-Enfield's cock-on-close action is one of the slickest handling ever.

1900 lee enfield bolt differences

Even though it was not intended to be used as we use magazines today-that's what stripper clips were for-it could be removed for cleaning and maintenance. In 1888, the British combined Lee's magazine with shallow polygonal, Metford rifling, but later changed the barrel over to five-groove deeper Enfield rifling. Lee had success with Remington adopting his magazine in 1875, but that rifle really went nowhere. If ever a rifle was ideal for the war it would fight, it was the SMLE and World War I.īased on designs by American inventor James Paris Lee, the SMLE gets the "M" in in its name from its 10-round-capacity detachable box magazine. In particular, the Short, Magazine Lee-Enfield, Mk III. That rifle, of course, is the Lee-Enfield.

1900 lee enfield bolt differences

Tonight on MidwayUSA's Gun Stories you can see interviews and high speed-I mean really high speed-videography of my favorite military rifle of the early part of the 20th century.












1900 lee enfield bolt differences