Enfield Wood Work

Pre 1945 action rifles. Muzzle loading.

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Stuck

Enfield Wood Work

#1 Post by Stuck »

Hi all,

Does anyone know from what type wood the wood work on a '47 No.5 was made?

More importantly does anyone know how they were originally finished? (i.e. oiled or varnished?)

Thanks in advance,

Mick.
saddler

Re: Enfield Wood Work

#2 Post by saddler »

Look in THE BOOK

Enfield Story, by Ian Skennerton

All your answers, plus the answers to the questions that you have not yet thought of...
Gaz

Re: Enfield Wood Work

#3 Post by Gaz »

Usually beech on post-war new build rifles, oiled with linseed oil. Do you have a picture?
Stuck

Re: Enfield Wood Work

#4 Post by Stuck »

cheers guys,

Beech sounds about right, havent got a picture of how it is at the moment as im sanding away a dozen layers of varnish.

Saddler, that looks a cracking book but I'm not paying £150!
ukrifleman
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Re: Enfield Wood Work

#5 Post by ukrifleman »

Stuck wrote:cheers guys,

Beech sounds about right, havent got a picture of how it is at the moment as im sanding away a dozen layers of varnish.

Saddler, that looks a cracking book but I'm not paying £150!
Henry Krank has the Skennerton book in stock at £49-95, it is 608 pages of brilliant information in hard back.
ukrifleman.
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Alpha1
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Joined: Fri Nov 12, 2010 8:27 pm

Re: Enfield Wood Work

#6 Post by Alpha1 »

Try ABE books they deal in second hand books.
Rearlugs
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Re: Enfield Wood Work

#7 Post by Rearlugs »

Most No5s built by BSA and Fazakerley were stocked in beech, however the earlier pattern wood without a nosecap was often walnut.

India later made a very large number of replacement wood sets for their No5s, and this wood is a dense grain type that also resembles walnut.
huntervixen

Re: Enfield Wood Work

#8 Post by huntervixen »

Just to add my bit to the wood refinishing, make sure you use raw and not boiled linseed oil, raw is the correct military finish.
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