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Wikipedia

Lee–Enfield

The Lee–Enfield is a bolt-action, magazine-fed repeating rifle that served as the main firearm of the military forces of the British Empire and Commonwealth during the first half of the 20th century, and was the standard service rifle of the British Armed Forces from its official adoption in 1895 until 1957.[9][10]

Lee–Enfield
A 1903 Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk I in the Swedish Army Museum
TypeBolt-action rifle
Place of originUnited Kingdom
British Empire
Service history
In service1895–1957 (as the standard British service rifle)
Used bySee Users
Wars
Production history
DesignerJames Paris Lee
Manufacturer
Produced
  • MLE: 1895–1904
  • SMLE: 1904–present
[citation needed]
No. built17,000,000+[7]
VariantsSee Models/marks
Specifications
Mass
  • 9.24 lb (4.19 kg) (Mk I)
  • 8.73 lb (3.96 kg) (Mk III)
  • 9.06 lb (4.11 kg) (No. 4)
Length
  • MLE: 49.6 in (1,260 mm)
  • SMLE No. 1 Mk III: 44.57 in (1,132 mm)
  • Rifle No. 4 Mk I: 44.45 in (1,129 mm)
  • LEC: 40.6 in (1,030 mm)
  • Rifle No. 5 Mk I: 39.5 in (1,003 mm)
Barrel length
  • MLE: 30.2 in (767 mm)
  • SMLE No. 1 Mk III: 25.2 in (640 mm)
  • Rifle No. 4 Mk I: 25.2 in (640 mm)
  • LEC: 21.2 in (540 mm)
  • Rifle No. 5 Mk I: 18.8 in (480 mm)

Cartridge.303 British
ActionBolt-action
Rate of fire20–30 aimed shots per minute
Muzzle velocity2,441 ft/s (744 m/s)
Effective firing range550 yd (503 m)[8]
Maximum firing range3,000 yd (2,743 m)[8]
Feed system10-round box magazine, loaded with 5-round charger clips (not in MLE)
SightsSliding ramp rear sights, fixed-post front sights, "dial" long-range volley; telescopic sights on sniper models. Fixed and adjustable aperture sights incorporated onto later variants

A redesign of the Lee–Metford (adopted by the British Army in 1888), the Lee–Enfield superseded the earlier Martini–Henry, Martini–Enfield, and Lee-Metford rifles. It featured a ten-round box magazine which was loaded with the .303 British cartridge manually from the top, either one round at a time or by means of five-round chargers. The Lee–Enfield was the standard issue weapon to rifle companies of the British Army, colonial armies (such as India and parts of Africa), and other Commonwealth nations in both the First and Second World Wars (such as Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and Canada).[11] Although officially replaced in the United Kingdom with the L1A1 SLR in 1957, it remained in widespread British service until the early/mid-1960s and the 7.62 mm L42A1 sniper variant remained in service until the 1990s. As a standard-issue infantry rifle, it is still found in service in the armed forces of some Commonwealth nations,[12] notably with the Bangladesh Police, which makes it the second longest-serving military bolt-action rifle still in official service, after the Mosin–Nagant (Mosin-Nagant receivers are used in the Finnish 7.62 Tkiv 85).[13] Total production of all Lee–Enfields is estimated at over 17 million rifles.[7]

The Lee–Enfield takes its name from the designer of the rifle's bolt system—James Paris Lee—and the location where its rifling design was created—the Royal Small Arms Factory in Enfield.

Design and history edit

The Lee–Enfield rifle was derived from the earlier Lee–Metford, a mechanically similar black-powder rifle, which combined James Paris Lee's rear-locking bolt system that had a barrel featuring rifling designed by William Ellis Metford. The bolt has a relatively short bolt throw and features rear-mounted lugs, and the bolt operating handle places the bolt knob just rearwards of the trigger at a favourable ergonomic position close to the operator's hand. The action features helical locking surfaces (the technical term is interrupted threading). This means that final headspace is not achieved until the bolt handle is turned down all the way. Helical locking lugs were probably used both to allow the chambering of imperfect or dirty ammunition and also so that the closing cam action is distributed over the entire mating faces of both bolt and receiver lugs. This is one reason the bolt closure feels smooth. [citation needed] The rifle was also equipped with a detachable sheet-steel, 10-round, double-column magazine, a very modern development in its day. Originally, the concept of a detachable magazine was opposed in some British Army circles, as some feared that the private soldier might be likely to lose the magazine during field campaigns. Early models of the Lee–Metford and Lee–Enfield even used a short length of chain to secure the magazine to the rifle.[14] To further facilitate rapid aimed fire the rifle can be cycled by most riflemen without loss of sight picture.

These design features facilitate rapid cycling and fire compared to other bolt-action designs like the Mauser.[10] The Lee bolt-action and 10-round magazine capacity enabled a well-trained rifleman to perform the "mad minute" firing 20 to 30 aimed rounds in 60 seconds, making the Lee–Enfield the fastest military bolt-action rifle of the day. The current world record for aimed bolt-action fire was set in 1914 by a musketry instructor in the British Army—Sergeant Instructor Snoxall—who placed 38 rounds into a 12-inch-wide (300 mm) target at 300 yards (270 m) in one minute.[15] Some straight-pull bolt-action rifles were thought faster but lacked the simplicity, reliability, and generous magazine capacity of the Lee–Enfield. Several First World War accounts tell of British troops repelling German attackers who subsequently reported that they had encountered machine guns, when in fact it was simply a group of well-trained riflemen armed with SMLE Mk III rifles.[16][17]

 
Standard Mk VII .303-inch cartridge for Lee–Enfield rifle

The Lee–Enfield was adapted to fire the .303 British service cartridge, a rimmed, high-powered rifle round. Experiments with smokeless powder in the existing Lee–Metford cartridge seemed at first to be a simple upgrade, but the greater heat and pressure generated by the new smokeless powder wore away the shallow and rounded Metford rifling after approximately 6,000 rounds.[9] Replacing this with a new square-shaped rifling system designed at the Royal Small Arms Factory (RSAF) Enfield solved the problem, and the Lee–Enfield was born.[9]

Models/marks of Lee–Enfield rifle and service periods edit

Model/Mark In service
Magazine Lee–Enfield 1895–1926
Charger loading Lee–Enfield 1906–1926
Short magazine Lee–Enfield Mk I 1904–1926
Short magazine Lee–Enfield Mk II 1906–1927
Short magazine Lee–Enfield Mk III/III* 1907–present
Short magazine Lee–Enfield Mk V 1922–1924 (trials only; 20,000 produced)
Rifle No. 1 Mk VI 1930 (trials only; 1,025 produced and leftover parts assembled into rifles early in WWII)
Rifle No. 4 Mk I 1931–present (2,500 trials examples produced in the 1930s, then mass production from mid-1941 onwards)
Rifle No. 4 Mk I* 1942–present
Rifle No. 5 Mk I "jungle carbine" 1944–present (produced 1944–1947) BSA-Shirley produced 81,329 rifles and ROF Fazakerley 169,807 rifles.
Rifle No. 4 Mk 2 1949–present
Rifle 7.62 mm 2A 1964–present
Rifle 7.62 mm 2A1 1965–present

Magazine Lee–Enfield edit

 
A Magazine Lee Enfield Mk I* rifle ("Long Tom"), used in the Second Boer War by the New Zealand Mounted Rifles

The Lee–Enfield rifle was introduced in November 1895 as the .303 calibre, Rifle, Magazine, Lee–Enfield,[9] or more commonly Magazine Lee–Enfield, or MLE (sometimes spoken as "emily" instead of M, L, E). The next year, a shorter version was introduced as the Lee–Enfield cavalry carbine Mk I, or LEC, with a 21.2-inch (540 mm) barrel as opposed to the 30.2-inch (770 mm) one in the "long" version.[9] Both underwent a minor upgrade series in 1899 (the omission of the cleaning / clearing rod), becoming the Mk I*.[18] Many LECs (and LMCs in smaller numbers) were converted to special patterns, namely the New Zealand carbine and the Royal Irish Constabulary carbine, or NZ and RIC carbines, respectively.[19] Some of the MLEs (and MLMs) were converted to load from chargers, and designated Charger Loading Lee–Enfields, or CLLEs.[20]

Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk I edit

A shorter and lighter version of the original MLE—the Rifle, Short, Magazine, Lee–Enfield or SMLE (sometimes spoken as "Smelly", rather than "S-M-L-E")[13]—was introduced on 1 January 1904. The barrel was now halfway in length between the original long rifle and the carbine, at 25.2 inches (640 mm).[21] The SMLE's visual trademark was its blunt nose, with only the bayonet boss protruding a small fraction of an inch beyond the nosecap, being modelled on the Swedish Model 1894 cavalry carbine. The new rifle also incorporated a charger loading system,[22][full citation needed] another innovation borrowed from the Mauser rifle and notably different from the fixed "bridge" that later became the standard: a charger clip (stripper clip) guide on the face of the bolt head.[23][clarification needed] The shorter length was controversial at the time; many rifle association members and gunsmiths were concerned that the shorter barrel would not be as accurate as the longer MLE barrels, that the recoil would be much greater and the sighting radius would be too short.[24]

Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk III edit

 
Short Magazine Lee–Enfield No. 1 Mk. III
 
An Indian rifleman with an SMLE Mk III, Egypt, 16 May 1940
 
Women training at Mishmar HaEmek kibbutz with SMLE Mk IIIs during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War
 
Magazine cut-off on an SMLE Mk III rifle. This feature was removed on the Mk III* rifle.

The best-known Lee–Enfield rifle, the SMLE Mk III, was introduced on 26 January 1907, along with a Pattern 1907 bayonet and featured a simplified rear sight arrangement and a fixed, rather than a bolt-head-mounted sliding, charger guide.[13] The design of the handguards and the magazine were also improved and the chamber was adapted to fire the new Mk VII high velocity spitzer .303 ammunition. Many early models, Magazine Lee–Enfields (MLEs), Magazine Lee–Metfords (MLMs) and SMLEs, were rebuilt to the Mk III standard. These are called "Mk IV Cond.", with various asterisks denoting subtypes.[25] Another feature present on the No. 1 Mk III as well as many other models of the SMLE was a field cleaning kit enclosed behind a trapdoor in the buttstock which included a barrel pull through with various cloths and an oil bottle enclosed deeper within the compartment.

 
A member of the Home Guard operating an SMLE No. 1 Mk III Rifle equipped with a grenade launcher cup loaded with an Anti-Tank Grenade of the era.

During the First World War, the SMLE Mk III was found to be too complicated to manufacture (an SMLE Mk III rifle cost the British government £3/15/– = £3.75[when?]), and demand outstripped supply; in late 1915 the Mk III* was introduced incorporating several changes, the most prominent of which were the deletion of the magazine cut-off mechanism, which when engaged permits the feeding and extraction of single cartridges only while keeping the cartridges in the magazine in reserve, and the long-range volley sights.[26][25][27] The windage adjustment of the rear sight was also dispensed with, and the cocking piece was changed from a round knob to a serrated slab.[28] Rifles with some or all of these features present are found, as the changes were implemented at different times in different factories and as stocks of parts were depleted.[29] The magazine cut-off was reinstated after the First World War ended, and not entirely dispensed with in manufacturing until 1933; some rifles with cut-offs remained into the 1960s.[28] One notable later use of the rifles were rifle grenade launcher conversions which involved the attachment of a removable grenade cup which would use the pressure of a blank round to launch a single modified Mills Bomb which had a launching range of about 10 to 200 yards.

The inability of the principal manufacturers (RSAF Enfield, the Birmingham Small Arms Company Limited and London Small Arms Co. Ltd) to meet military production demands led to the development of the "peddled scheme", which contracted out the production of whole rifles and rifle components to several shell companies.[30] As a result, the production was quadrupled in the first year of the war from slightly over 100 thousands annually before the war.[31]

SMLE production during WWI[32]
Producer 1914 (Aug.-Dec.) 1915 1916 1917 1918 Total
Enfield 51,576 271,856 418,283 640,113 626,330 2,008,158
BSA 56,416 275,927 435,212 468,447 345,732 1,581,854
LSA 12,101 65,678 99,433 97,012 89,990 364,214
Total (UK) 120,093 613,461 852,928 1,205,572 1,062,052 3,854,106
Canada 0 2,650 33,476 82,360 0 118,486
USA 0 0 282,495 835,355 0 1,117,850
Grand total 120,093 616,111 1,168,899 2,123,287 1,062,052 5,090,442

The SMLE Mk III* (renamed Rifle No.1 Mk III* in 1926) saw extensive service throughout the Second World War, especially in the North African, Italian, Pacific and Burmese theatres in the hands of British and Commonwealth forces. Australia and India retained and manufactured the SMLE Mk III* as their standard rifle during the conflict, and the rifle remained in Australian military service through the Korean War, until it was replaced by the L1A1 SLR in the late 1950s.[33] The Lithgow Small Arms Factory finally ceased production of the SMLE Mk III* in 1953.[25]

The Rifle Factory Ishapore at Ishapore in India produced the Mk III* in .303 British, and then the model 2A, with strength increased by heat treatment of the receiver and bolt to fire 7.62×51mm NATO ammunition, retaining the 2,000-yard rear sight as the metric conversion of distance was very close to the flatter trajectory of the new ammunition. The model 2|A1 changed the rear sight to 800 m, and was manufactured until at least the 1980s; a sporting rifle based on the Mk III* action remained in production.

The rifle became known simply as the "three-oh-three".[34]

Pattern 1913 Enfield edit

Due to the poor performance of the .303 British cartridge during the Second Boer War from 1899 to 1902, the British attempted to replace the round and the Lee–Enfield rifle that fired it. The main deficiency of the rounds at the time was that they used heavy, round-nosed bullets that had low muzzle velocities and poor ballistic performance. The 7×57mm Mauser rounds fired from the Mauser Model 1895 rifle had a higher velocity, flatter trajectory and longer range, making them superior for the open plains of South Africa. Work on a long-range replacement cartridge began in 1910 and resulted in the .276 Enfield in 1912. A new rifle based on the Mauser design was created to fire the round, called the Pattern 1913 Enfield. Although the .276 Enfield had better ballistics, trials by British Army soldiers in 1913 revealed problems including excessive recoil, muzzle flash, barrel wear and overheating. It was hoped that a propellant with a lower burning temperature would be an improvement, but the onset of the First World War in 1914 ended development before a suitable propellant could be found. Wartime demand and the improved Mk VII loading of the .303 round caused the Lee–Enfield to be retained for service.[35]

Inter-war period edit

 
Lee–Enfield No. 4 Mk I Long Branch aperture sights

In 1926, the British Army changed its nomenclature; the SMLE became known as the Rifle No. 1 Mk III or III*, with the original MLE and LEC becoming obsolete along with the earlier SMLE models.[36] Many Mk III and III* rifles were converted to .22 rimfire calibre training rifles, and designated Rifle No. 2, of varying marks. (The Pattern 1914 became the Rifle No. 3.)[36]

Lee–Enfield No. 1 Mk V edit

The SMLE design was relatively expensive to manufacture, because of the many forging and machining operations required. In the 1920s, a series of experiments were carried out to help with these problems, resulting in design changes which reduced the number of complex parts and refining manufacturing processes. The SMLE Mk V (later Rifle No. 1 Mk V), adopted a new receiver-mounted aperture sighting system, which moved the rear sight from its former position on the barrel.[37] The increased gap resulted in an improved sighting radius, improving sighting accuracy and the aperture improved speed of sighting over various distances. In the stowed position, a fixed distance aperture battle sight calibrated for 300 yd (274 m) protruded saving further precious seconds when laying the sight to a target. An alternative developed during this period was to be used on the No. 4 variant, a "battle sight" was developed that allowed for two set distances of 300 yards and 600 yards to be quickly deployed and was cheaper to produce than the "ladder sight". The magazine cutoff was also reintroduced and an additional band was added near the muzzle for additional strength during bayonet use.[37]

Long before the No. 4 Mk I, Britain had obviously settled on the rear aperture sight prior to WWI, with modifications to the SMLE being tested as early as 1911, as well as later on the No. 1 Mk III pattern rifle. These unusual rifles have something of a mysterious service history, but represent a missing link in SMLE development. The primary distinguishing feature of the No. 1 Mk V is the rear aperture sight. Like the No. 1 Mk III* it lacked a volley sight and had the wire loop in place of the sling swivel at the front of magazine well along with the simplified cocking piece. The Mk V did retain a magazine cut-off, but without a spotting hole, the piling swivel was kept attached to a forward barrel band, which was wrapped over and attached to the rear of the nose cap to reinforce the rifle for use with the standard Pattern 1907 bayonet. Other distinctive features include a nose cap screw was slotted for the width of a coin for easy removal, a safety lever on the left side of the receiver was slightly modified with a unique angular groove pattern, and the two-piece hand guard being extended from the nose cap to the receiver, omitting the barrel mounted leaf sight. The design was found to be even more complicated and expensive to manufacture than the Mk III and was not developed or issued, beyond a trial production of about 20,000 rifles between 1922 and 1924 at RSAF Enfield all of which marked with a "V".[37]

The No. 1 Mk VI also introduced a heavier "floating barrel" that was independent of the forearm, allowing the barrel to expand and contract without contacting the forearm and interfering with the "zero", the correlation between the alignment of the barrel and the sights. The floating barrel increased the accuracy of the rifle by allowing it to vibrate freely and consistently, whereas wooden forends in contact with barrels, if not properly fitted, affected the harmonic vibrations of the barrel. The receiver-mounted rear sights and magazine cutoff were also present and 1,025 units were produced in the 1930 period.[38]

Rifle No. 4 edit

 
Lee–Enfield No. 4 Mk I (1943), Swedish Army Museum, Stockholm
 
Lee–Enfield No. 4 Mk 2 with the ladder aperture sight flipped up and 5-round charger

In the early 1930s, a batch of 2,500 No. 4 Mk. I rifles was made for trials. These were similar to the No. 1 Mk. VI but had a flat left side and did away with the chequering on the furniture. Observed examples are dated 1931 and 1933. Roughly 1,400 of these were converted to No. 4 MK. I (T) sniper rifles in 1941–1942 at RSAF Enfield.

By the late 1930s, the need for new rifles grew and the Rifle, No. 4 Mk I was officially adopted in 1941.[39] The No. 4 action was similar to the No.1 Mk VI but stronger and easier to mass-produce.[40] Unlike the SMLE, that had a nose cap, the No 4 Lee–Enfield barrel protruded from the end of the forestock. For easier machining, the charger bridge was no longer rounded. The iron sight line was redesigned and featured a rear receiver aperture battle sight calibrated for 300 yd (274 m) with an additional ladder aperture sight that could be flipped up and was calibrated for 200–1,300 yd (183–1,189 m) in 100 yd (91 m) increments. This sight, like other aperture sights, proved to be faster and more accurate than the typical mid-barrel open rear sight elements sight lines offered by Mauser, previous Lee–Enfields or the Buffington battle sight of the M1903 Springfield.

The No. 4 rifle was heavier than the No. 1 Mk. III, largely due to its heavier barrel. A new bayonet was designed to go with the rifle: a spike bayonet the No. 4 bayonet, essentially a steel rod with a sharp point, nicknamed "pigsticker" by soldiers.[40] Towards the end of the Second World War, a bladed bayonet was developed for the No.5 Mk.I rifle ("jungle carbine"). Post-war versions were made that would fit No. 4 rifles and were designated No. 7 and No. 9 blade bayonets.[41]

During the course of the Second World War, the No. 4 rifle was further simplified for mass-production with the creation of the No. 4 Mk I* in 1942, with the bolt release catch replaced by a simpler notch on the bolt track of the rifle's receiver. It was produced only by Small Arms Limited at Long Branch in Canada, and Stevens-Savage Firearms in the US.[42] The No.4 rifle was primarily produced for the United Kingdom, Canada and some other Commonwealth countries including New Zealand.[43] In 1943 it cost £7 15s (£7.75) to produce[44] By comparison, a Sten Mk II submachine gun cost £2 10s (£2.50).[45]

In the years after the Second World War, the British produced the No. 4 Mk 2 (Arabic numerals replaced Roman numerals in official names in 1944) rifle, a refined and improved No. 4 rifle with the trigger hung forward from the butt collar and not from the trigger guard, beech wood stocks (with the original reinforcing strap and centre piece of wood in the rear of the forestock on the No.4 Mk I/Mk I* being removed in favour of a tie screw and nut) and brass "gunmetal" buttplates (during the war the British, Americans and Canadians replaced the brass buttplates on the No.4 rifles with a zinc alloy (Zamak) type to reduce costs and speed production). Near the end of the war and after, Canada made blued steel buttplates.[46] With the introduction of the No. 4 Mk 2 rifle, the British refurbished many of their No. 4 rifles and brought them up to the same standard as the No. 4 Mk 2.[47] The No. 4 Mk 1 rifles were renamed No. 4 Mk I/2, while No. 4 Mk I* rifles that were brought up to Mk 2 standard were renamed No. 4 Mk I/3.[42]

The refurbishment of the No.4 MkIs and No.4 MkI*s to the No.4 Mk2 specifications were done during the 1950s at ROF Fazakerley and BSA Shirley. The No.4 rifles refurbished at ROF Fazakerley were for British military use while No.4 rifles refurbished at BSA Shirley were for commercial sale to various British Commonwealth countries and to civilian rifle shooters in the UK and the Commonwealth.

Rifle No. 5 Mk I—the "jungle carbine" edit

 
Rifle No. 5 on display at the Parachute Regiment and Airborne Forces Museum

Later in the war, the need for a shorter, lighter rifle forced the development of the Rifle, No. 5 Mk I (the "jungle carbine").[48] With a cut-down stock, a prominent flash hider, and a "lightening-cut" receiver machined to remove all unnecessary metal, reduced barrel length of 18.8 in (478 mm) the No. 5 was shorter and 2 lb (0.9 kg) lighter. Despite a rubber butt-pad, the .303 round produced excessive recoil due to the shorter barrel. It was unsuitable for general issue and production ceased in 1947, due to an "inherent fault in the design", often claimed to be a "wandering zero" and accuracy problems.[49]

The No. 5 iron sight line was similar to the No. 4 Mark I and featured a rear receiver aperture battle sight calibrated for 300 yd (274 m) with an additional ladder aperture sight that could be flipped up and was calibrated for 200–800 yd (183–732 m) in 100 yd (91 m) increments. The No. 5 Mk I was popular with soldiers owing to its light weight, portability and shorter length than a standard Lee–Enfield rifle.[50] The No. 5 was first issued to the British 1st Airborne Division and used during its liberation of Denmark and Norway in 1945. BSA-Shirley, Birmingham produced 81,329 rifles and ROF Fazakerley, Liverpool 169,807 rifles. It was equipped with a No. 5 Mk. I blade bayonet which had a large muzzle ring to fit over the flash hider. The No. 7 Mk. I/L bayonet, which has a rotating handle and a large ring on the cross-guard was not for the No. 5 Mk. I rifle as many collectors believe.

An Australian experimental version of the No. 5 Mk I, designated Rifle, No. 6, Mk I[51] was also developed, using an SMLE MK III* as a starting point (as opposed to the No. 4 Mk I used to develop the No. 5 Mk I). The Australian military was not permitted to manufacture the No. 4 Mk I, because the Lithgow Small Arms Factory was producing the SMLE Mk III. The No. 6 Mk I never entered full production and examples are rare and valuable to collectors.[48] A "shortened and lightened" version of the SMLE Mk III* rifle was also tested by the Australian military and a very small number were manufactured at SAF Lithgow during the course of the Second World War.[52]

The term "jungle carbine" was popularised in the 1950s by the Santa Fe Arms Corporation, a U.S. importer which refurbished many surplus rifles, converting many of the No. 4 marks, in the hope of increasing sales of a rifle that had little U.S. market penetration. It was never an official military designation but British and Commonwealth troops serving in the Burmese and Pacific theatres during World War II had been known to unofficially refer to the No. 5 Mk I as a "jungle carbine".[48] The No. 4 and No. 5 rifles served in the Korean War (as did the No.1 Mk III* SMLE and sniper "T" variants, mostly with Australian troops).[13]

Lee–Enfield conversions and training models edit

Sniper rifles edit

 
Canadian sniper Sergeant Harold Marshall carries a No. 4 Mk. I (T) chambered in .303 British
 
L42A1 sniper rifle chambered in 7.62×51mm NATO

During both World Wars and the Korean War, a number of Lee–Enfield rifles were modified for use as sniper rifles. The Australian Army modified 1,612[53] Lithgow SMLE No. 1 Mk. III* rifles by adding a heavy target barrel, cheek-piece, and a World War I era Pattern 1918 telescope, creating the SMLE No. 1 Mk. III* (HT). (HT standing for "heavy barrel, telescopic sight),[13] which saw service in the Second World War, Korea, and Malaya and was used for sniper training through to the late 1970s.[54]

During the Second World War, standard No. 4 rifles, selected for their accuracy during factory tests, were modified by the addition of a wooden cheek rising-piece, and telescopic sight mounts designed to accept a No. 32 3.5× telescopic sight.[55] The telescopic sight had a field of view of 8 degrees 20 minutes and featured a bullet drop compensation range drum on top of the sight graduated in 50 yards (45.7 m) increments from 0 to 1,000 yards (914 m). Side adjustments in 2 MOA increments were made by the drum mounted at the side of the sight. These rifles were designated as the No. 4 Mk. I (T). The accuracy requirement was ability to place seven of seven shots in a 5 inches (12.7 cm) circle at 200 yards (183 m) and six of seven shots in a 10 inches (25.4 cm) circle at 400 yards (366 m). The wooden cheek-piece was attached with two screws. The rear "battle sight" was ground off to make room to attach the No. 32 telescope sight to the left side of the receiver. Each No. 32 and its bracket (mount) were matched and serial numbered to a specific rifle.[56]

In British service, the No. 32 telescope progressed through three marks with the Mk. I introduced in 1942, the Mk. II in 1943 which offered side adjustments in finer 1 MOA increments, and finally the Mk. III (Mk. 3) in 1944 which had an improved field of view of 8 degrees 30 minutes.[57] A transitional model the No. 32 Mk. 2/1 was also made. The Canadian scopes made by Research Enterprises Limited and were prefixed with a letter C and went through C No. 32 Mk. I, Mk. I A (a transitional model), Mk. II and Mk. 3. Many Mk. 3s and Mk. 2/1s (Mk. 2s Modified to Mk. 3 standard) were later modified for use with the 7.62×51mm NATO L42A1 sniper rifle. They were then known by the designation Telescope Straight, Sighting L1A1.

Initial production was 1,403 conversions of 1931–1933 troop trials No. 4 Mk. I rifles at RSAF Enfield and a few others including Stevens-Savage No. 4s. These were converted in late 1941 and into the later part of 1942. Then, the work was assigned to Holland & Holland, the famous British sporting gun manufacturers, which converted about 23,000 No. 4 Mk. I (T) and No. 4 Mk. I* (T) sniper rifles. The Holland & Holland conversions usually have the contractor code "S51" on the underside of the buttstock. BSA Shirley undertook 100 conversions to .22". James Purdey and Sons fitted special buttstocks later in the war. About 3,000 rifles, mostly Stevens-Savage, appear to have been partially converted by Holland & Holland but never received brackets, scopes of the final "T" mark. Canada converted about 1,588 rifles at Small Arms Limited (to the end of 1945) and, in 1946, at Canadian Arsenals Limited. Both were located at Long Branch, Ontario. Most of the Canadian made No.4 Mk.I* (T) sniper equipments went into British service. The No.4 (T) rifles were extensively employed in various conflicts until the late 1960s.

The British military switched over to the 7.62×51mm NATO round in the 1950s; starting in 1970, over 1,000 of the No. 4 Mk I (T) and No. 4 Mk. I* (T) sniper rifles were converted to this new calibre and designated L42A1.[46] The L42A1 sniper rifle continued as the British Army's standard sniper weapon being phased out by 1993, and replaced by Accuracy International's L96.[58]

.22 training rifles edit

Numbers of Lee–Enfield rifles were converted to .22 calibre training rifles,[59] in order to teach cadets and new recruits the various aspects of shooting, firearms safety, and marksmanship at a markedly reduced cost per round. Initially, rifles were converted from obsolete Magazine Lee–Metford and Magazine Lee–Enfield rifles[60][61] but from the First World War onwards SMLE rifles were used instead. These were known as .22 Pattern 1914 short rifles[62] during The First World War and Rifle, No. 2 Mk. IV[63] from 1921 onwards.[64] They were generally single-shot affairs, originally using Morris tubes chambered for the cheap .22L cartridge and some larger types, circa 1907. Some were later modified with special adaptors to enable magazine loading. In 1914, Enfield produced complete .22 barrels and bolts specifically for converting .303 units, and these soon became the most common conversion. A five-round .22 cal Parker-Hiscock magazine was also developed and in service for a relatively short period during the later period of the First World War, but was subsequently withdrawn from issue due to reliability problems with its quite complicated loading and feeding mechanisms.[65][66] No. 2 Mk. IV rifles are externally identical to .303 calibre SMLE Mk III* rifles, the only difference being the .22 calibre barrel, empty magazine case, bolthead and extractor which have been modified to fire .22 calibre rimfire cartridges.[67]

After the Second World War, the Rifle, No. 7, Rifle, No. 8 and Rifle, No. 9, all .22 rimfire trainers and target rifles based on the Lee action, were adopted or in use with cadet units and target shooters throughout the Commonwealth, the No.8 as of 2017 has been replaced among cadet forces due to obsolescence.[68][69]

In Britain, a .22RF version of the No.5 rifle was prototyped by BSA and trialled with a view to it becoming the British Service training rifle when the .303" CF No.5 was initially mooted as being a potential replacement for the No.4 rifle.[70]

The C No.7 22" MK.I rifle is a .22 single-shot, manually fed, training version of the No.4 Mk I* rifle manufactured at Long Branch.[71] Production of this model was 1944–1946 and a few in 1950 to 1953.[72][unreliable source?]

Muskets and shotguns edit

Conversion of rifles to smoothbore guns was carried out in several locations, at various times, for varying reasons.

SAF Lithgow, in Australia, produced shotguns based on the MkIII action under the "Slazenger" name, chambering the common commercial .410 shotgun shell.[73] Commercial gunsmiths in Australia and Britain converted both MkIII and No. 4 rifles to .410 shotguns. These conversions were prompted by firearms legislation that made possession of a rifle chambered in a military cartridge both difficult and expensive. Smoothbore shotguns could be legally held with far less trouble.

RFI, in India, converted a large number of MkIII rifles to single-shot muskets, chambered for the .410 Indian musket cartridge. These conversions were for issue to police and prison guards, to provide a firearm with a much-reduced power and range in comparison to the .303 cartridge. A further likely consideration was the difficulty of obtaining replacement ammunition in the event of the rifle's theft or the carrier's desertion.

While British and Australian conversions were to the standard commercially available .410 shotgun cartridge (though of varying chamber lengths) the Indian conversions have been the source of considerable confusion. The Indian conversions were originally chambered for the .410 Indian musket cartridge, which is based on the .303 British cartridge, and will not chamber the common .410 shotgun cartridge. Many of these muskets were rechambered, after being sold as surplus, and can now be used with commercially available ammunition. Unmodified muskets require handloading of ammunition, as the .410 Indian Musket cartridge was not commercially distributed and does not appear to have been manufactured since the 1950s.

Numerous attempts have been made to convert the various single-shot .410 shotgun models to a bolt-action repeating model by removing the wooden magazine plug and replacing it with a standard 10-round SMLE magazine. None of these is known to have been successful,[74] though some owners have adapted three-round magazines for Savage and Stevens shotguns to function in a converted SMLE shotgun, or even placing such a magazine inside a gutted SMLE magazine.

Civilian conversions and variants edit

From the late 1940s, legislation in New South Wales, Australia, heavily restricted .303 British calibre (and other "military calibre") rifles,[75] so large numbers of SMLEs were converted to "wildcat" calibres such as .303/25, .303/22, .303/270 and the popular 7.7×54mm round.[76] 303/25 calibre sporterised SMLEs are very common in Australia today, although ammunition for them has been very scarce since the 1980s.[75] The restrictions placed on "military calibre" rifles in New South Wales were lifted in 1975, and many people who had converted their Lee–Enfields to the "wildcat" rounds converted their rifles back to .303 British.[75] Post-Second World War, SAF Lithgow converted a number of SMLE rifles to commercial sporting rifles- notably the .22 Hornet model- under the "Slazenger" brand.[77]

In the early 1950s Essential Agencies Ltd. (E.A.L.), of Toronto, Ontario, produced a run of several thousand survival rifles based on the No. 4 action, but lightened and shortened, chambered in .303 British. Serial numbers below 6000 were for civilian sale, serial numbers 6000 and higher were built under contract to the Canadian government. The Royal Canadian Air Force also used these as a survival rifle in the remote parts of Canada.[citation needed]

L59A1 Drill Rifle edit

The L59A1 was a conversion of the No. 4 rifle (all marks) to a drill purpose rifle that was incapable of being restored to a firing configuration. It was introduced in service in the 1970s. A conversion specification of No. 1 rifles to L59A2 drill purpose was also prepared but was abandoned due to the greater difficulty of machining involved and the negligible numbers still in the hands of cadet units.

The L59A1 arose from British government concerns over the vulnerability of the Army Cadet Force and school Combined Cadet Forces' (CCF) stocks of small arms to theft by terrorists, in particular the Irish Republican Army following raids on CCF armouries in the 1950s and 1960s. Previous conversions to drill purpose (DP) of otherwise serviceable rifles were[78] not considered to be sufficiently incapable of restoration to fireable state and were a potential source of reconversion spares.

L59A1 drill rifles were rendered incapable of being fired, and of being restored to a fireable form, by extensive modifications that included the welding of the barrel to the receiver, modifications to the receiver that removed the supporting structures for the bolt's locking lugs and blocking the installation of an unaltered bolt, the removal of the striker's tip, the blocking of the striker's hole in the bolt head and the removal of most of the bolt body's locking lugs. Most bolts were copper plated for identification. A plug was welded in place forward of the chamber, and a window was cut in the side of the barrel. The stock and fore end were marked with broad white painted bands (often with red bands, and also rarely seen blue bands or stripes) and the letters DP for easy identification.

Special service Lee–Enfields: Commando and automatic models edit

De Lisle commando carbine edit

 
The initial wooden-stocked De Lisle with a suppressor

The commando units of the British military requested a suppressed rifle for killing sentries, guard dogs and other clandestine operational uses during the Second World War. The resulting weapon, designed by Godfray de Lisle, was effectively an SMLE Mk III* receiver redesigned to take a .45 ACP cartridge and associated magazine, with a barrel from a Thompson submachine gun and an integrated suppressor.[27] It was produced in very limited numbers and an experimental folding stock version was made.

Ekins automatic rifle edit

The Ekins automatic rifle was one of the numerous attempts to convert a Lee–Enfield SMLE to an automatic rifle.[79] Similar developments were the South African Rieder automatic rifle and the New Zealand and Australian Charlton automatic rifles.

Howard Francis carbine edit

Howard Francis self-loading carbine
TypeCarbine
Place of originUnited Kingdom
Production history
DesignerHoward Francis
Specifications
Mass3.7 kg (8.2 lb)
Length812 mm (32.0 in)
Barrel length324 mm (12.8 in)

Cartridge7.63×25mm Mauser
Rate of fireSemi-automatic
Feed system12-round box magazine
SightsIron sights

The Howard Francis self-loading carbine was a conversion of a No. 1 Mk III to the 7.63×25mm Mauser pistol cartridge.[80] It fired in semi-automatic only and suffered some feeding and extraction problems and, despite meeting accuracy and soundness of design concept, never made it past the prototype stage.

Howell automatic rifle edit

The Howell automatic rifle was the first attempt to convert the Lee–Enfield SMLE into a semi-automatic rifle. The weapon was reliable but unergonomic for the user as the force of the recoiling bolt interfered with handling.

Rieder automatic rifle edit

The Rieder automatic rifle was an automatic (full automatic only) Lee–Enfield SMLE rifle of South African origin. The Rieder device could be installed straight away without the use of tools.

Turner automatic conversion edit

Long-stroke piston tilting bolt semi automatic conversion developed by Turner Russel, proposed for the canadian goverment in 1941 but was rejected.[81]

Conversion to 7.62×51mm NATO edit

In 1954, the War Office adopted the 7.62×51mm NATO-calibre L1A1 Self-Loading Rifle for use by frontline infantry units. While it was intended that rear-echelon and reserve units would continue to use the Lee-Enfield No. 4 in order to avoid the expense of rearming those units with the L1A1 as well, Britain's commitments as a NATO member meant that the .303in cartridge could no longer be used; thus, the early 1960s saw the approval of a plan to convert the Lee–Enfield No. 4 to the newer NATO cartridge.[82] Rifles that were thus converted were re-designated as the L8 series of rifles and refitted with 7.62×51mm NATO barrels, new bolt faces and extractor claws, new rear sights, and 7.62×51mm NATO magazines. The appearance of the L8 series rifles was no different from the original No. 4 rifles, except for the new barrel (which still retained the original No. 4 rifle bayonet lugs) and magazine.[83][82] The L8 series of rifles consisted of L8A1 rifles (converted No. 4 Mk2 rifles), L8A1 (T) rifles (converted No .4 Mk 1 (T) rifles),[82] L8A2 rifles (converted No. 4 Mk1/2 rifles), L8A3 rifles (converted No. 4 Mk1/3 rifles), L8A4 rifles (converted No. 4 Mk1 rifles), and L8A5 rifles (converted No. 4 Mk1* rifles).

The results of the trials that were conducted on the L8 series rifles were mixed; the L8A1 (T) rifles fired test groups that bore no relation to those fired while they were still No. 4 Mk 1 (T) rifles nor was there any consistent accuracy between those rifles that had been chosen for conversion, while the regular L8 rifles gave a better performance but with little or no improvement over .303in weapons; consequently, the conversion programme was abandoned and what was now known as the Ministry of Defence was forced to expand the issue of L1A1 rifles to non-frontline units.[82] However, experience from the programme, including the magazine design, was used to aid the later L42A1 conversion programme.[84][85]

In the late 1960s, RSAF Enfield entered the commercial market by producing No. 4-based 7.62×51mm rifles for sale. The products were marketed under alliterative names e.g. Enfield Envoy, a rifle intended for civilian competition target shooting and Enfield Enforcer, a rifle fitted with a Pecar telescopic sight to suit the requirements of police firearms teams.

Sterling Armaments of Dagenham, Essex. produced a conversion kit comprising a new 7.62 mm barrel, magazine, extractor and ejector for commercial sale. The main difference between the two conversions was in the cartridge ejection arrangement; the Enfield magazine carried a hardened steel projection that struck the rim of the extracted case to eject it, the Sterling system employed a spring-loaded plunger inserted into the receiver wall.

Ishapore 2A/2A1 edit

 
Ishapore 2A1

At some point just after the Sino-Indian War of 1962, the Rifle Factory Ishapore in India began producing a new type of rifle known as the Rifle 7.62 mm 2A, which was based on the SMLE Mk III*[86] and was slightly redesigned to use the 7.62×51mm NATO round. Externally the new rifle is very similar to the classic Mk III*, with the exception of the buttplate (the buttplate from the 1A SLR is fitted) and magazine, which is more "square" than the SMLE magazine, and usually carries twelve rounds instead of ten,[87] although a number of 2A1s have been noted with 10-round magazines.

Ishapore 2A and Ishapore 2A1 receivers are made with improved (EN) steel (to handle the increased pressures of the 7.62×51mm round)[88] and the extractor is redesigned to suit the rimless cartridge. From 1965 to 1975 (when production is believed to have been discontinued), the sight ranging graduations were changed from 2,000 to 800, and the rifle re-designated Rifle 7.62 mm 2A1.[89] The original 2,000 yards (1,800 m) rear sight arm was found to be suitable for the ballistics of the 7.62×51mm, which is around 10% more powerful and equates to a flatter trajectory than that of the .303 British MkVII ammunition, so it was a simple matter to think of the 2,000 as representing metres rather than yards. It was then decided that the limit of the effective range was a more realistic proposition at 800 m.

The Ishapore 2A and 2A1 rifles are often incorrectly described as ".308 conversions". The 2A/2A1 rifles are not conversions of .303 calibre SMLE Mk III* rifles. Rather, they are newly manufactured firearms and are not technically chambered for commercial .308 Winchester ammunition. However, many 2A/2A1 owners shoot such ammunition in their rifles with no problems, although some factory loaded .308 Winchester cartridges may appear to generate higher pressures than 7.62×51mm NATO, even though the rounds are otherwise interchangeable – this is due to the different systems of pressure measurement used for NATO and commercial cartridges.

Manufacturers edit

 
A Delhi Police marching contingent passes through the Rajpath during the rehearsal for the celebration of 60th Republic Day -2009 carrying the Indian version of the Lee Enfield SMLE

In total, over 16 million Lee–Enfields had been produced in several factories on different continents when production in Britain ended in 1956 at the Royal Ordnance Factory ROF Fazakerley in Liverpool, after that factory had been plagued with industrial unrest. The machinery from ROF Fazakerley was sold to Pakistan Ordnance Factories (POF) in Rawalpindi where production and repair of the No.4 Mk I started from 1952 till 1957 and then production changed over to No.4 Mk II from 1957.[90][91] Also contributing to the total was the Rifle Factory Ishapore (RFI) at Ishapore in India, which continued to produce the SMLE in both .303 and 7.62×51mm NATO until the 1980s, and is still manufacturing a sporting rifle based on the SMLE Mk III action, chambered for a .315 calibre cartridge,[92] the Birmingham Small Arms Company factory at Shirley near Birmingham, and SAF Lithgow in Australia, who finally discontinued production of the SMLE Mk III* with a final 'machinery proving' batch of 1000 rifles in early 1956, using 1953-dated receivers. During the First World War alone, 3.8 million SMLE rifles were produced in the UK by RSAF Enfield, BSA, and LSA.[93]

 
The wristguard markings on a 1918-dated Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk III* rifle manufactured by the London Small Arms Co. Ltd. The "G.R." under the crown stands for "George Rex" and refers to the reigning monarch at the time the rifle was manufactured.

List of manufacturers edit

Manufacturer markings of MLE, CLLE, and SMLE Mk I—Mk III*
Marking Manufacturer Country
Enfield Royal Small Arms Factory Enfield United Kingdom
Sparkbrook Royal Small Arms Factory Sparkbrook United Kingdom
BSA Co Birmingham Small Arms Company United Kingdom
LSA Co London Small Arms Co. Ltd United Kingdom
Lithgow Lithgow Small Arms Factory Australia
GRI Rifle Factory Ishapore British India
RFI Rifle Factory Ishapore India (Post-Independence)

"SSA" and "NRF" markings are sometimes encountered on First World War-dated SMLE Mk III* rifles. These stand for "Standard Small Arms" and "National Rifle Factory", respectively. Rifles so marked were assembled using parts from various other manufacturers, as part of a scheme during the First World War to boost rifle production in the UK. Only SMLE Mk III* rifles are known to have been assembled under this program. GRI stands for "Georgius Rex, Imperator" (Latin for 'King George, Emperor (of India)', denoting a rifle made during the British Raj. RFI stands for "Rifle Factory, Ishapore", denoting a rifle made after the Partition of India in 1947.

Manufacturer marks for No. 4 Mk I, No. 4 Mk I* and No. 4 Mk 2
Marking Manufacturer Country
ROF (F) Royal Ordnance Factory Fazakerley United Kingdom
ROF (M) Royal Ordnance Factory Maltby United Kingdom
B The Birmingham Small Arms Company Limited United Kingdom
M47 and later M47C Birmingham Small Arms Factory (Shirley) United Kingdom
Long Branch Small Arms Limited and later, Canadian Arsenals Limited Canada
Squared S and US property Savage Arms United States
POF Pakistan Ordnance Factories Pakistan

Second World War UK production rifles had manufacturer codes for security reasons. For example, BSA Shirley is denoted by M47C, ROF(M) is often simply stamped "M", and BSA is simply stamped "B". Savage-made Lee–Enfield No. 4 Mk I and No. 4 Mk I* rifles are all stamped "US property". They were supplied to the UK under the Lend-Lease programme during the Second World War. No Savage Lee–Enfields were ever issued to the US military; the markings existed solely to maintain the pretense that American equipment was being lent to the UK rather than permanently sold to them.[94]

Australian International Arms No. 4 Mk IV edit

 
AIA M10-B2 match rifle

The Brisbane-based Australian International Arms also manufactured a modern reproduction of the No. 4 Mk II rifle, which they marketed as the AIA No. 4 Mk IV. The rifles were manufactured by parts outsourcing and were assembled and finished in Australia, chambered in 7.62×51mm NATO and fed from modified M14 magazines. The No. 4 Mk IV was designed with the modern shooter in mind, and has the ability to mount a telescopic sight without drilling and tapping the receiver.[95] AIA also offered the AIA M10-A1 rifle, a jungle carbine-styled version chambered in 7.62×39mm Russian, which uses AK-47 magazines.[96] Magazine supply and importation (M14 and AK 10 single stack mag) whilst legal in Australia, has been spasmodically curtailed by Australian Federal Customs (for more information, see Gun politics in Australia). It is possible to obtain a 10-round (the maximum allowed by law) M14 magazines for the M10-B2 match rifles in particular, provided an import permit from the appropriate licensing services division can be obtained in some states, yet Australian Federal Customs may still refuse importation on no valid grounds.[97]

Khyber Pass copies edit

A number of British Service Rifles, predominantly the Martini–Henry and Martini–Enfield, but also the various Lee–Enfield rifles, have been produced by small manufacturers in the Khyber Pass region of the Pakistani-Afghan border.[98]

"Khyber Pass copies", as they are known, tend to be copied exactly from a "master" rifle, which may itself be a Khyber Pass copy, markings and all, which is why it's not uncommon to see Khyber Pass rifles with the N in "Enfield" reversed, amongst other things.[99]

The quality on such rifles varies from "as good as a factory-produced example" to "dangerously unsafe", tending towards the latter end of the scale. Khyber Pass copy rifles cannot generally stand up to the pressures generated by modern commercial ammunition,[99] and are generally considered unsafe to fire under any circumstances.[13]

Khyber Pass copies can be recognised by a number of factors, notably:

  • Spelling errors in the markings; as noted the most common of which is a reversed "N" in "Enfield")
  • V.R. (Victoria Regina) cyphers dated after 1901; Queen Victoria died in 1901, so any rifles made after 1901 should be stamped "E.R" (Edwardius RexKing Edward VII or King Edward VIII) or "G.R" (Georgius RexKing George V or King George VI).
  • Generally inferior workmanship, including weak or soft metal, poorly finished wood, and badly struck markings.[99]

Armalon edit

British company Armalon Ltd[100] developed a number of rifles based on the Lee Enfield No. 4. The PC gallery rifle is a carbine in pistol and revolver calibres, the AL42 is a 5.56 mm rifle and the AL30C, a carbine in .30 Carbine.

Contemporary service edit

 
An Afghan mujahid carries a Lee–Enfield in August 1985
 
A Rwandan soldier trains with a Lee-Enfield, 2011
 
Canadian Rangers, photographed in Nunavut, June 2011

The Lee–Enfield family of rifles is the second oldest bolt-action rifle design still in official service, after the Mosin–Nagant.[13] Lee–Enfield rifles are used by reserve forces and police forces in many Commonwealth countries, including Malawi. In Canada the .303 and .22 models were being phased out between 2016 and 2019. The Canadian Rangers had been using the .303 model for over 70 years but switched to the Colt Canada C19 due to increasing lack of spare parts. The Indian Army phased them out in 1990–92, replacing them with AKM-type rifles (see Indo-Russia Rifles). Indian police officers carrying SMLE Mk III* and Ishapore 2A1 rifles were a familiar sight throughout railway stations in India after Mumbai train bombings of 2006 and the November 2008 Mumbai attacks. They are also still seen in the hands of Pakistani and Bangladeshi second-line police units. However, the Lee–Enfield was mainly replaced in main-line service in the Pakistani Police in the mid-1980s by the AK 47, in response to increasing proliferation of the Kalashnikov in the black market and civilian use. In Jordan, the Lee–Enfield was in use with the Police and Gendarmerie until 1971, and with the Armed Forces until 1965. In Iraq and Egypt, the Lee–Enfield was replaced by the Kalashnikov as the standard issue rifle in the Armed Forces by the late 1950s, and in Police Forces by the late 1970s. In the UK, the single-shot .22 calibre Rifle No. 8 is in regular use with UK Cadet Forces as a light target rifle.[101] Enfields continue to be used as drill weapons by the National Ceremonial Guard of the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) as well as the Australian Defence Force Cadets.[102]

Many Afghans resisting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan were armed with Lee–Enfields.[103] The CIA's Operation Cyclone provided hundreds of thousands of Enfields to the Afghan mujahideen, funneling them through Pakistan's ISI. CIA officer Gust Avrakotos later arranged for the Egyptian Ministry of Defence to set up production lines of Enfield .303 ammunition specifically for the conflict. Later on when Avrakotos asked Michael Vickers to revamp their strategy, he stopped the Enfield system and, with the large amounts of money available thanks to Charlie Wilson, replaced them with a mix of modern weapons like AK-47s and mortars.[104]

 
An SMLE owned by Maoist rebels in Nepal, 2005
 
Change of command ceremony in Indonesian Army with colour guard holding Lee-Enfield rifles, 2013

Khyber Pass Copies patterned after the Lee–Enfield are still manufactured in the Khyber Pass region, as bolt-action rifles remain effective weapons in desert and mountain environments where long-range accuracy is more important than rate of fire.[13] Lee–Enfield rifles are still popular in the region, despite the presence and ready availability of more modern weapons such as the SKS-45, the AKM, the Chinese Type 56 assault rifle, and the AK-74.[13][105] As of 2012, Lee–Enfield rifles are still being used by the Taliban.[90]

During the recent civil war in Nepal, the government troops were issued Lee–Enfield rifles to fight the Maoist rebels, and the Maoists were also armed with SMLE rifles, amongst other weapons. Nepalese Police constables may also be usually seen equipped with SMLE rifles.[106] Lee–Enfield rifles have also been seen in the hands of both the Naxalites and the Indian police in the ongoing Maoist insurgency in rural India.

Police forces in both the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu continue to operate and maintain stocks of No.4 rifles.[107] The Tongan security forces also retain a substantial number of No.4 rifles donated from New Zealand's reserve stocks.[107]

Lee Enfield rifles are used by the Jamaica Constabulary force for training recruits during field-craft exercises and drills.

Civilian use edit

Lee–Enfields are very popular as hunting rifles and target shooting rifles. Many surplus Lee–Enfield rifles were sold in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa, the United Kingdom and the United States after the Second World War, and a fair number have been 'sporterised', having had the front furniture reduced or removed and a scope fitted so that they resemble a bolt-action sporting rifle.[13] Top-notch accuracy is difficult to achieve with the Lee–Enfield design,[40] as it was intended to be a battle rifle rather than a sharpshooter's weapon,[40] and thus the Enfield is nowadays overshadowed by derivatives of Paul Mauser's design as a target shooting arm. They did, however, continue to be used at Bisley up into the 1970s with some success, and continue to perform extremely well at Military Service Rifle Competitions throughout the world.[13]

Many people still hunt with as-issued Lee–Enfield rifles, with commercial .303 British ammunition proving especially effective on medium-sized game.[13] Soft-point .303 ammunition is widely available for hunting purposes, though the Mark 7 military cartridge design often proves adequate because its tail-heavy design makes the bullet yaw violently and deform after hitting the target.[108][109]

The Lee–Enfield rifle is a popular gun for historic rifle enthusiasts and those who find the 10-round magazine, loading by charger clips, and the rapid bolt-action useful for Practical Rifle events. Since formation in 1998, organisations such as the Lee Enfield Rifle Association have assisted in not just preserving rifles in shooting condition (many Lee–Enfields are being deactivated and sold as "wall-hangers" to collectors who do not hold a Firearms Licence in countries where they are required), but holding events and competitions. Lee–Enfields are also popular with competitors in service rifle competitions in many Commonwealth countries.

The Lee–Enfield series is very popular for service rifle shooting competitions in the UK and Australia due to the prohibitions on the legal ownership of semi-automatic centrefire rifles in Great Britain and restrictions on the legal ownership of semi-automatic centrefire rifles in Australia.[110][111] (For more information see Gun politics in the United Kingdom and Gun politics in Australia.)

Rhineland Arms produces .45 ACP conversion kits for the Lee–Enfield action using M1911 pistol magazines.[112]

The Lee–Speed Sporter was a higher quality British made version of the Lee–Enfield.

Rifle Factory Ishapore of India still manufactures a sporting/hunting rifle chambered in .315 with a Lee–Enfield action.[113]

Variants edit

  • Magazine Lee–Enfield (MLE), .303, introduced 1895.[114]
  • Lee–Enfield Cavalry Carbine Mk I (LEC), .303, introduced 1896.[115]
  • Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk I*, .303, introduced 1899.[116]
  • Lee–Enfield Cavalry Carbine Mk I*, .303, introduced 1899.[115]
  • New Zealand Carbine, .303
  • Royal Irish Constabulary Carbine, .303
  • Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk I (SMLE), .303, introduced 1904.
  • Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk II, .303, introduced 1906.
  • Charger Loading Lee–Enfield (CLLE), .303, introduced 1906.
  • No. 1 Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk III, .303, introduced 1907.
  • No. 1 Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk III*, .303, introduced 1915.
  • No. 1 Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk III* (HT), .303, "Heavy Barrel, Telescopic Sight" Australian sniper rifle.
  • No. 1 Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk V, .303, introduced 1922.
  • No. 1 Short Magazine Lee–Enfield Mk VI, .303, introduced 1930.
  • No. 2, .22, converted from .303 SMLE Mk III and Mk III*.
  • No. 2 Mk IV, .22
  • No. 2 Mk IV*, .22
  • No. 4 Mk I, .303, introduced 1931.
  • No. 4 Mk I (T), .303, sniper rifle converted from No. 4 Mk I, introduced 1941.
  • No. 4 Mk I*, .303, introduced 1941.
  • No. 4 Mk I* (T), .303, Sniper rifle converted from No. 4 Mk I*, introduced 1941.
  • No. 4 Mk 2, .303, introduced 1949.
  • No. 4 Mk I/2, .303, converted from No. 4 Mk I to No. 4 Mk 2 standard.
  • No. 4 Mk I/3, .303, converted from No. 4 Mk I* to No. 4 Mk 2 standard.
  • No. 5 Mk I, Jungle Carbine, .303, introduced 1944.
  • No. 6 Mk I, .303, Australian experimental version of the No. 5 Mk I.
  • No. 7, .22
  • No. 8 Mk I, .22
  • No. 9, .22
  • RCAF Survival rifle
  • L8A1, 7.62mm, converted from No. 4 Mk 2
  • L8A2, 7.62mm, converted from No. 4 Mk I/3
  • L8A3, 7.62mm, converted from No. 4 Mk I/3
  • L8A4, 7.62mm, converted from No. 4 Mk I
  • L8A5, 7.62mm, converted from No. 4 Mk I*
  • L39A1, 7.62mm
  • L42A1, 7.62mm
  • L59A1, Drill Rifle, converted from No. 4.
  • E.A.L. Rifle, built by Essential Agencies Limited (E.A.L.)
  • BA 93, a rifle grenade launcher made from surplus Lee–Enfield parts, which consist of stocks and receiver with a rifle grenade launcher in the chamber and a sheet metal buttstock while attaching a G3-type pistol grip.[117]

Users edit

 
Turkish 8×57mm conversion of a Lee–Enfield captured during World War I
 
Members of the Milice of Vichy France, armed with captured British No. 4 Lee–Enfield Rifles and Bren guns
 
Unit of Cypriot National Guard with Sten Submachine guns and No. 4 Lee–Enfield Rifles in 1967

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Contre les Mau Mau". Encyclopédie des armes : Les forces armées du monde (in French). Vol. XII. Atlas. 1986. pp. 2764–2766.
  2. ^ "Fourteen days in Cyprus". Maclean's. Vol. 77, no. 12. 20 June 1964. pp. 14–15 & 36–42.
  3. ^ Neville, Leigh (25 August 2016). Modern Snipers. General Military. Osprey Publishing. p. 30. ISBN 9781472815347.
  4. ^ Cashner, Bob (2013). The FN FAL Battle Rifle. Oxford, UK: Osprey Publishing. p. 36. ISBN 978-1-78096-903-9.
  5. ^ Cashner 2013, p. 51.
  6. ^ Smith, Colin (6 July 2014). "Cyprus divided: 40 years on, a family recalls how the island was torn apart". The Guardian.
  7. ^ a b Skennerton 1993, p. 153, 230.
  8. ^ a b . The Lee–Enfield Rifle Website. Archived from the original on 22 September 2010. Retrieved 13 May 2010.
  9. ^ a b c d e Skennerton 2007, p. 90.
  10. ^ a b Hogg 1978, p. 215.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Skennerton 2007, p. 587.
  12. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 264.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Wilson 2007a.
  14. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 60.
  15. ^ Skennerton, Ian. "Arms and Militaria, Bulletin Board". Retrieved 28 January 2009.
  16. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 159.
  17. ^ Tucker 2013, p. 279.
  18. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 91.
  19. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 453–454.
  20. ^ Skennerton 1997, p. 8.
  21. ^ Skennerton 1994c, p. 5.
  22. ^ LOC § 11715
  23. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 132.
  24. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 126.
  25. ^ a b c Skennerton 1994c, p. 9.
  26. ^ Skennerton 2007, pp. 132, 161.
  27. ^ a b Skennerton 2001a, p. 7.
  28. ^ a b Skennerton 2007, p. 161.
  29. ^ Skennerton 1994c, p. 7.
  30. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 171–172.
  31. ^ Statistics of the military effort of the British Empire during the Great War : 1914-1920. London: HMSO. 1922. p. 473.
  32. ^ Statistics of the military effort of the British Empire during the Great War : 1914-1920. London: HMSO. 1922. p. 479.
  33. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 338.
  34. ^ "Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum". www.lithgowsafmuseum.org.au.
  35. ^ THE .256 INCH BRITISH: A LOST OPPORTUNITY by Anthony G Williams 6 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  36. ^ a b Skennerton 1994c, p. 8.
  37. ^ a b c Skennerton 2007, p. 187.
  38. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 189, 194.
  39. ^ Skennerton 1994b, p. 5.
  40. ^ a b c d Smith 1979, p. 21.
  41. ^ Skennerton 2007, p. 406.
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External links edit

enfield, this, article, about, early, twentieth, century, british, rifle, other, uses, rifle, enfield, rifle, disambiguation, bolt, action, magazine, repeating, rifle, that, served, main, firearm, military, forces, british, empire, commonwealth, during, first,. This article is about the early twentieth century British rifle For other uses see Lee rifle and Enfield rifle disambiguation The Lee Enfield is a bolt action magazine fed repeating rifle that served as the main firearm of the military forces of the British Empire and Commonwealth during the first half of the 20th century and was the standard service rifle of the British Armed Forces from its official adoption in 1895 until 1957 9 10 Lee EnfieldA 1903 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk I in the Swedish Army MuseumTypeBolt action riflePlace of originUnited KingdomBritish EmpireService historyIn service1895 1957 as the standard British service rifle Used bySee UsersWarsList Second Boer WarWorld War IEaster RisingVarious colonial conflictsPolish Soviet WarJallianwala Bagh MassacreIrish War of IndependenceIrish Civil WarConstitutionalist Revolution Limited Spanish Civil WarWorld War IIIndonesian National RevolutionIndo Pakistani WarsGreek Civil WarMalayan EmergencyFrench Indochina WarKorean War1948 Arab Israeli WarBorder Campaign Irish Republican Army Mau Mau Uprising 1 Suez CrisisAlgerian WarPortuguese Colonial WarCongo CrisisBattle of Mengo HillNathu La and Cho La clashesNigerian Civil WarVietnam WarRhodesian Bush WarCypriot intercommunal violence 2 The Troubles 3 Sino Indian War 4 Dhofar Rebellion 5 Zanzibar Revolution citation needed Chadian Civil WarBangladesh Liberation WarTurkish invasion of Cyprus 6 Uganda Tanzania War citation needed Soviet Afghan WarNepalese Civil WarWar in Afghanistan 2001 2021 Iraq WarMyanmar Civil WarProduction historyDesignerJames Paris LeeManufacturerRoyal Small Arms Factory Birmingham Small Arms Company Lithgow Small Arms Factory London Small Arms Co Ltd Pakistan Ordnance Factories Rifle Factory Ishapore ROF Fazakerley ROF Maltby Savage ArmsProducedMLE 1895 1904 SMLE 1904 present citation needed No built17 000 000 7 VariantsSee Models marksSpecificationsMass9 24 lb 4 19 kg Mk I 8 73 lb 3 96 kg Mk III 9 06 lb 4 11 kg No 4 LengthMLE 49 6 in 1 260 mm SMLE No 1 Mk III 44 57 in 1 132 mm Rifle No 4 Mk I 44 45 in 1 129 mm LEC 40 6 in 1 030 mm Rifle No 5 Mk I 39 5 in 1 003 mm Barrel lengthMLE 30 2 in 767 mm SMLE No 1 Mk III 25 2 in 640 mm Rifle No 4 Mk I 25 2 in 640 mm LEC 21 2 in 540 mm Rifle No 5 Mk I 18 8 in 480 mm Cartridge 303 BritishActionBolt actionRate of fire20 30 aimed shots per minuteMuzzle velocity2 441 ft s 744 m s Effective firing range550 yd 503 m 8 Maximum firing range3 000 yd 2 743 m 8 Feed system10 round box magazine loaded with 5 round charger clips not in MLE SightsSliding ramp rear sights fixed post front sights dial long range volley telescopic sights on sniper models Fixed and adjustable aperture sights incorporated onto later variantsA redesign of the Lee Metford adopted by the British Army in 1888 the Lee Enfield superseded the earlier Martini Henry Martini Enfield and Lee Metford rifles It featured a ten round box magazine which was loaded with the 303 British cartridge manually from the top either one round at a time or by means of five round chargers The Lee Enfield was the standard issue weapon to rifle companies of the British Army colonial armies such as India and parts of Africa and other Commonwealth nations in both the First and Second World Wars such as Australia New Zealand South Africa and Canada 11 Although officially replaced in the United Kingdom with the L1A1 SLR in 1957 it remained in widespread British service until the early mid 1960s and the 7 62 mm L42A1 sniper variant remained in service until the 1990s As a standard issue infantry rifle it is still found in service in the armed forces of some Commonwealth nations 12 notably with the Bangladesh Police which makes it the second longest serving military bolt action rifle still in official service after the Mosin Nagant Mosin Nagant receivers are used in the Finnish 7 62 Tkiv 85 13 Total production of all Lee Enfields is estimated at over 17 million rifles 7 The Lee Enfield takes its name from the designer of the rifle s bolt system James Paris Lee and the location where its rifling design was created the Royal Small Arms Factory in Enfield Contents 1 Design and history 1 1 Models marks of Lee Enfield rifle and service periods 2 Magazine Lee Enfield 3 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk I 4 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk III 4 1 Pattern 1913 Enfield 5 Inter war period 6 Lee Enfield No 1 Mk V 7 Rifle No 4 8 Rifle No 5 Mk I the jungle carbine 9 Lee Enfield conversions and training models 9 1 Sniper rifles 9 2 22 training rifles 9 3 Muskets and shotguns 9 4 Civilian conversions and variants 9 5 L59A1 Drill Rifle 10 Special service Lee Enfields Commando and automatic models 10 1 De Lisle commando carbine 10 2 Ekins automatic rifle 10 3 Howard Francis carbine 10 4 Howell automatic rifle 10 5 Rieder automatic rifle 10 6 Turner automatic conversion 11 Conversion to 7 62 51mm NATO 11 1 Ishapore 2A 2A1 12 Manufacturers 12 1 List of manufacturers 12 1 1 Australian International Arms No 4 Mk IV 12 2 Khyber Pass copies 12 3 Armalon 13 Contemporary service 14 Civilian use 15 Variants 16 Users 17 See also 18 Notes 19 References 20 External linksDesign and history editThe Lee Enfield rifle was derived from the earlier Lee Metford a mechanically similar black powder rifle which combined James Paris Lee s rear locking bolt system that had a barrel featuring rifling designed by William Ellis Metford The bolt has a relatively short bolt throw and features rear mounted lugs and the bolt operating handle places the bolt knob just rearwards of the trigger at a favourable ergonomic position close to the operator s hand The action features helical locking surfaces the technical term is interrupted threading This means that final headspace is not achieved until the bolt handle is turned down all the way Helical locking lugs were probably used both to allow the chambering of imperfect or dirty ammunition and also so that the closing cam action is distributed over the entire mating faces of both bolt and receiver lugs This is one reason the bolt closure feels smooth citation needed The rifle was also equipped with a detachable sheet steel 10 round double column magazine a very modern development in its day Originally the concept of a detachable magazine was opposed in some British Army circles as some feared that the private soldier might be likely to lose the magazine during field campaigns Early models of the Lee Metford and Lee Enfield even used a short length of chain to secure the magazine to the rifle 14 To further facilitate rapid aimed fire the rifle can be cycled by most riflemen without loss of sight picture These design features facilitate rapid cycling and fire compared to other bolt action designs like the Mauser 10 The Lee bolt action and 10 round magazine capacity enabled a well trained rifleman to perform the mad minute firing 20 to 30 aimed rounds in 60 seconds making the Lee Enfield the fastest military bolt action rifle of the day The current world record for aimed bolt action fire was set in 1914 by a musketry instructor in the British Army Sergeant Instructor Snoxall who placed 38 rounds into a 12 inch wide 300 mm target at 300 yards 270 m in one minute 15 Some straight pull bolt action rifles were thought faster but lacked the simplicity reliability and generous magazine capacity of the Lee Enfield Several First World War accounts tell of British troops repelling German attackers who subsequently reported that they had encountered machine guns when in fact it was simply a group of well trained riflemen armed with SMLE Mk III rifles 16 17 nbsp Standard Mk VII 303 inch cartridge for Lee Enfield rifleThe Lee Enfield was adapted to fire the 303 British service cartridge a rimmed high powered rifle round Experiments with smokeless powder in the existing Lee Metford cartridge seemed at first to be a simple upgrade but the greater heat and pressure generated by the new smokeless powder wore away the shallow and rounded Metford rifling after approximately 6 000 rounds 9 Replacing this with a new square shaped rifling system designed at the Royal Small Arms Factory RSAF Enfield solved the problem and the Lee Enfield was born 9 Models marks of Lee Enfield rifle and service periods edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Model Mark In serviceMagazine Lee Enfield 1895 1926Charger loading Lee Enfield 1906 1926Short magazine Lee Enfield Mk I 1904 1926Short magazine Lee Enfield Mk II 1906 1927Short magazine Lee Enfield Mk III III 1907 presentShort magazine Lee Enfield Mk V 1922 1924 trials only 20 000 produced Rifle No 1 Mk VI 1930 trials only 1 025 produced and leftover parts assembled into rifles early in WWII Rifle No 4 Mk I 1931 present 2 500 trials examples produced in the 1930s then mass production from mid 1941 onwards Rifle No 4 Mk I 1942 presentRifle No 5 Mk I jungle carbine 1944 present produced 1944 1947 BSA Shirley produced 81 329 rifles and ROF Fazakerley 169 807 rifles Rifle No 4 Mk 2 1949 presentRifle 7 62 mm 2A 1964 presentRifle 7 62 mm 2A1 1965 presentMagazine Lee Enfield edit nbsp A Magazine Lee Enfield Mk I rifle Long Tom used in the Second Boer War by the New Zealand Mounted RiflesThe Lee Enfield rifle was introduced in November 1895 as the 303 calibre Rifle Magazine Lee Enfield 9 or more commonly Magazine Lee Enfield or MLE sometimes spoken as emily instead of M L E The next year a shorter version was introduced as the Lee Enfield cavalry carbine Mk I or LEC with a 21 2 inch 540 mm barrel as opposed to the 30 2 inch 770 mm one in the long version 9 Both underwent a minor upgrade series in 1899 the omission of the cleaning clearing rod becoming the Mk I 18 Many LECs and LMCs in smaller numbers were converted to special patterns namely the New Zealand carbine and the Royal Irish Constabulary carbine or NZ and RIC carbines respectively 19 Some of the MLEs and MLMs were converted to load from chargers and designated Charger Loading Lee Enfields or CLLEs 20 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk I editA shorter and lighter version of the original MLE the Rifle Short Magazine Lee Enfield or SMLE sometimes spoken as Smelly rather than S M L E 13 was introduced on 1 January 1904 The barrel was now halfway in length between the original long rifle and the carbine at 25 2 inches 640 mm 21 The SMLE s visual trademark was its blunt nose with only the bayonet boss protruding a small fraction of an inch beyond the nosecap being modelled on the Swedish Model 1894 cavalry carbine The new rifle also incorporated a charger loading system 22 full citation needed another innovation borrowed from the Mauser rifle and notably different from the fixed bridge that later became the standard a charger clip stripper clip guide on the face of the bolt head 23 clarification needed The shorter length was controversial at the time many rifle association members and gunsmiths were concerned that the shorter barrel would not be as accurate as the longer MLE barrels that the recoil would be much greater and the sighting radius would be too short 24 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk III edit nbsp Short Magazine Lee Enfield No 1 Mk III nbsp An Indian rifleman with an SMLE Mk III Egypt 16 May 1940 nbsp Women training at Mishmar HaEmek kibbutz with SMLE Mk IIIs during the 1948 Arab Israeli War nbsp Magazine cut off on an SMLE Mk III rifle This feature was removed on the Mk III rifle The best known Lee Enfield rifle the SMLE Mk III was introduced on 26 January 1907 along with a Pattern 1907 bayonet and featured a simplified rear sight arrangement and a fixed rather than a bolt head mounted sliding charger guide 13 The design of the handguards and the magazine were also improved and the chamber was adapted to fire the new Mk VII high velocity spitzer 303 ammunition Many early models Magazine Lee Enfields MLEs Magazine Lee Metfords MLMs and SMLEs were rebuilt to the Mk III standard These are called Mk IV Cond with various asterisks denoting subtypes 25 Another feature present on the No 1 Mk III as well as many other models of the SMLE was a field cleaning kit enclosed behind a trapdoor in the buttstock which included a barrel pull through with various cloths and an oil bottle enclosed deeper within the compartment nbsp A member of the Home Guard operating an SMLE No 1 Mk III Rifle equipped with a grenade launcher cup loaded with an Anti Tank Grenade of the era During the First World War the SMLE Mk III was found to be too complicated to manufacture an SMLE Mk III rifle cost the British government 3 15 3 75 when and demand outstripped supply in late 1915 the Mk III was introduced incorporating several changes the most prominent of which were the deletion of the magazine cut off mechanism which when engaged permits the feeding and extraction of single cartridges only while keeping the cartridges in the magazine in reserve and the long range volley sights 26 25 27 The windage adjustment of the rear sight was also dispensed with and the cocking piece was changed from a round knob to a serrated slab 28 Rifles with some or all of these features present are found as the changes were implemented at different times in different factories and as stocks of parts were depleted 29 The magazine cut off was reinstated after the First World War ended and not entirely dispensed with in manufacturing until 1933 some rifles with cut offs remained into the 1960s 28 One notable later use of the rifles were rifle grenade launcher conversions which involved the attachment of a removable grenade cup which would use the pressure of a blank round to launch a single modified Mills Bomb which had a launching range of about 10 to 200 yards The inability of the principal manufacturers RSAF Enfield the Birmingham Small Arms Company Limited and London Small Arms Co Ltd to meet military production demands led to the development of the peddled scheme which contracted out the production of whole rifles and rifle components to several shell companies 30 As a result the production was quadrupled in the first year of the war from slightly over 100 thousands annually before the war 31 SMLE production during WWI 32 Producer 1914 Aug Dec 1915 1916 1917 1918 TotalEnfield 51 576 271 856 418 283 640 113 626 330 2 008 158BSA 56 416 275 927 435 212 468 447 345 732 1 581 854LSA 12 101 65 678 99 433 97 012 89 990 364 214Total UK 120 093 613 461 852 928 1 205 572 1 062 052 3 854 106Canada 0 2 650 33 476 82 360 0 118 486USA 0 0 282 495 835 355 0 1 117 850Grand total 120 093 616 111 1 168 899 2 123 287 1 062 052 5 090 442The SMLE Mk III renamed Rifle No 1 Mk III in 1926 saw extensive service throughout the Second World War especially in the North African Italian Pacific and Burmese theatres in the hands of British and Commonwealth forces Australia and India retained and manufactured the SMLE Mk III as their standard rifle during the conflict and the rifle remained in Australian military service through the Korean War until it was replaced by the L1A1 SLR in the late 1950s 33 The Lithgow Small Arms Factory finally ceased production of the SMLE Mk III in 1953 25 The Rifle Factory Ishapore at Ishapore in India produced the Mk III in 303 British and then the model 2A with strength increased by heat treatment of the receiver and bolt to fire 7 62 51mm NATO ammunition retaining the 2 000 yard rear sight as the metric conversion of distance was very close to the flatter trajectory of the new ammunition The model 2 A1 changed the rear sight to 800 m and was manufactured until at least the 1980s a sporting rifle based on the Mk III action remained in production The rifle became known simply as the three oh three 34 Pattern 1913 Enfield edit Main article Pattern 1913 Enfield Due to the poor performance of the 303 British cartridge during the Second Boer War from 1899 to 1902 the British attempted to replace the round and the Lee Enfield rifle that fired it The main deficiency of the rounds at the time was that they used heavy round nosed bullets that had low muzzle velocities and poor ballistic performance The 7 57mm Mauser rounds fired from the Mauser Model 1895 rifle had a higher velocity flatter trajectory and longer range making them superior for the open plains of South Africa Work on a long range replacement cartridge began in 1910 and resulted in the 276 Enfield in 1912 A new rifle based on the Mauser design was created to fire the round called the Pattern 1913 Enfield Although the 276 Enfield had better ballistics trials by British Army soldiers in 1913 revealed problems including excessive recoil muzzle flash barrel wear and overheating It was hoped that a propellant with a lower burning temperature would be an improvement but the onset of the First World War in 1914 ended development before a suitable propellant could be found Wartime demand and the improved Mk VII loading of the 303 round caused the Lee Enfield to be retained for service 35 Inter war period edit nbsp Lee Enfield No 4 Mk I Long Branch aperture sightsIn 1926 the British Army changed its nomenclature the SMLE became known as the Rifle No 1 Mk III or III with the original MLE and LEC becoming obsolete along with the earlier SMLE models 36 Many Mk III and III rifles were converted to 22 rimfire calibre training rifles and designated Rifle No 2 of varying marks The Pattern 1914 became the Rifle No 3 36 Lee Enfield No 1 Mk V editThe SMLE design was relatively expensive to manufacture because of the many forging and machining operations required In the 1920s a series of experiments were carried out to help with these problems resulting in design changes which reduced the number of complex parts and refining manufacturing processes The SMLE Mk V later Rifle No 1 Mk V adopted a new receiver mounted aperture sighting system which moved the rear sight from its former position on the barrel 37 The increased gap resulted in an improved sighting radius improving sighting accuracy and the aperture improved speed of sighting over various distances In the stowed position a fixed distance aperture battle sight calibrated for 300 yd 274 m protruded saving further precious seconds when laying the sight to a target An alternative developed during this period was to be used on the No 4 variant a battle sight was developed that allowed for two set distances of 300 yards and 600 yards to be quickly deployed and was cheaper to produce than the ladder sight The magazine cutoff was also reintroduced and an additional band was added near the muzzle for additional strength during bayonet use 37 Long before the No 4 Mk I Britain had obviously settled on the rear aperture sight prior to WWI with modifications to the SMLE being tested as early as 1911 as well as later on the No 1 Mk III pattern rifle These unusual rifles have something of a mysterious service history but represent a missing link in SMLE development The primary distinguishing feature of the No 1 Mk V is the rear aperture sight Like the No 1 Mk III it lacked a volley sight and had the wire loop in place of the sling swivel at the front of magazine well along with the simplified cocking piece The Mk V did retain a magazine cut off but without a spotting hole the piling swivel was kept attached to a forward barrel band which was wrapped over and attached to the rear of the nose cap to reinforce the rifle for use with the standard Pattern 1907 bayonet Other distinctive features include a nose cap screw was slotted for the width of a coin for easy removal a safety lever on the left side of the receiver was slightly modified with a unique angular groove pattern and the two piece hand guard being extended from the nose cap to the receiver omitting the barrel mounted leaf sight The design was found to be even more complicated and expensive to manufacture than the Mk III and was not developed or issued beyond a trial production of about 20 000 rifles between 1922 and 1924 at RSAF Enfield all of which marked with a V 37 The No 1 Mk VI also introduced a heavier floating barrel that was independent of the forearm allowing the barrel to expand and contract without contacting the forearm and interfering with the zero the correlation between the alignment of the barrel and the sights The floating barrel increased the accuracy of the rifle by allowing it to vibrate freely and consistently whereas wooden forends in contact with barrels if not properly fitted affected the harmonic vibrations of the barrel The receiver mounted rear sights and magazine cutoff were also present and 1 025 units were produced in the 1930 period 38 Rifle No 4 edit nbsp Lee Enfield No 4 Mk I 1943 Swedish Army Museum Stockholm nbsp Lee Enfield No 4 Mk 2 with the ladder aperture sight flipped up and 5 round chargerIn the early 1930s a batch of 2 500 No 4 Mk I rifles was made for trials These were similar to the No 1 Mk VI but had a flat left side and did away with the chequering on the furniture Observed examples are dated 1931 and 1933 Roughly 1 400 of these were converted to No 4 MK I T sniper rifles in 1941 1942 at RSAF Enfield By the late 1930s the need for new rifles grew and the Rifle No 4 Mk I was officially adopted in 1941 39 The No 4 action was similar to the No 1 Mk VI but stronger and easier to mass produce 40 Unlike the SMLE that had a nose cap the No 4 Lee Enfield barrel protruded from the end of the forestock For easier machining the charger bridge was no longer rounded The iron sight line was redesigned and featured a rear receiver aperture battle sight calibrated for 300 yd 274 m with an additional ladder aperture sight that could be flipped up and was calibrated for 200 1 300 yd 183 1 189 m in 100 yd 91 m increments This sight like other aperture sights proved to be faster and more accurate than the typical mid barrel open rear sight elements sight lines offered by Mauser previous Lee Enfields or the Buffington battle sight of the M1903 Springfield The No 4 rifle was heavier than the No 1 Mk III largely due to its heavier barrel A new bayonet was designed to go with the rifle a spike bayonet the No 4 bayonet essentially a steel rod with a sharp point nicknamed pigsticker by soldiers 40 Towards the end of the Second World War a bladed bayonet was developed for the No 5 Mk I rifle jungle carbine Post war versions were made that would fit No 4 rifles and were designated No 7 and No 9 blade bayonets 41 During the course of the Second World War the No 4 rifle was further simplified for mass production with the creation of the No 4 Mk I in 1942 with the bolt release catch replaced by a simpler notch on the bolt track of the rifle s receiver It was produced only by Small Arms Limited at Long Branch in Canada and Stevens Savage Firearms in the US 42 The No 4 rifle was primarily produced for the United Kingdom Canada and some other Commonwealth countries including New Zealand 43 In 1943 it cost 7 15s 7 75 to produce 44 By comparison a Sten Mk II submachine gun cost 2 10s 2 50 45 In the years after the Second World War the British produced the No 4 Mk 2 Arabic numerals replaced Roman numerals in official names in 1944 rifle a refined and improved No 4 rifle with the trigger hung forward from the butt collar and not from the trigger guard beech wood stocks with the original reinforcing strap and centre piece of wood in the rear of the forestock on the No 4 Mk I Mk I being removed in favour of a tie screw and nut and brass gunmetal buttplates during the war the British Americans and Canadians replaced the brass buttplates on the No 4 rifles with a zinc alloy Zamak type to reduce costs and speed production Near the end of the war and after Canada made blued steel buttplates 46 With the introduction of the No 4 Mk 2 rifle the British refurbished many of their No 4 rifles and brought them up to the same standard as the No 4 Mk 2 47 The No 4 Mk 1 rifles were renamed No 4 Mk I 2 while No 4 Mk I rifles that were brought up to Mk 2 standard were renamed No 4 Mk I 3 42 The refurbishment of the No 4 MkIs and No 4 MkI s to the No 4 Mk2 specifications were done during the 1950s at ROF Fazakerley and BSA Shirley The No 4 rifles refurbished at ROF Fazakerley were for British military use while No 4 rifles refurbished at BSA Shirley were for commercial sale to various British Commonwealth countries and to civilian rifle shooters in the UK and the Commonwealth Rifle No 5 Mk I the jungle carbine editMain article Jungle Carbine nbsp Rifle No 5 on display at the Parachute Regiment and Airborne Forces MuseumLater in the war the need for a shorter lighter rifle forced the development of the Rifle No 5 Mk I the jungle carbine 48 With a cut down stock a prominent flash hider and a lightening cut receiver machined to remove all unnecessary metal reduced barrel length of 18 8 in 478 mm the No 5 was shorter and 2 lb 0 9 kg lighter Despite a rubber butt pad the 303 round produced excessive recoil due to the shorter barrel It was unsuitable for general issue and production ceased in 1947 due to an inherent fault in the design often claimed to be a wandering zero and accuracy problems 49 The No 5 iron sight line was similar to the No 4 Mark I and featured a rear receiver aperture battle sight calibrated for 300 yd 274 m with an additional ladder aperture sight that could be flipped up and was calibrated for 200 800 yd 183 732 m in 100 yd 91 m increments The No 5 Mk I was popular with soldiers owing to its light weight portability and shorter length than a standard Lee Enfield rifle 50 The No 5 was first issued to the British 1st Airborne Division and used during its liberation of Denmark and Norway in 1945 BSA Shirley Birmingham produced 81 329 rifles and ROF Fazakerley Liverpool 169 807 rifles It was equipped with a No 5 Mk I blade bayonet which had a large muzzle ring to fit over the flash hider The No 7 Mk I L bayonet which has a rotating handle and a large ring on the cross guard was not for the No 5 Mk I rifle as many collectors believe An Australian experimental version of the No 5 Mk I designated Rifle No 6 Mk I 51 was also developed using an SMLE MK III as a starting point as opposed to the No 4 Mk I used to develop the No 5 Mk I The Australian military was not permitted to manufacture the No 4 Mk I because the Lithgow Small Arms Factory was producing the SMLE Mk III The No 6 Mk I never entered full production and examples are rare and valuable to collectors 48 A shortened and lightened version of the SMLE Mk III rifle was also tested by the Australian military and a very small number were manufactured at SAF Lithgow during the course of the Second World War 52 The term jungle carbine was popularised in the 1950s by the Santa Fe Arms Corporation a U S importer which refurbished many surplus rifles converting many of the No 4 marks in the hope of increasing sales of a rifle that had little U S market penetration It was never an official military designation but British and Commonwealth troops serving in the Burmese and Pacific theatres during World War II had been known to unofficially refer to the No 5 Mk I as a jungle carbine 48 The No 4 and No 5 rifles served in the Korean War as did the No 1 Mk III SMLE and sniper T variants mostly with Australian troops 13 Lee Enfield conversions and training models editSniper rifles edit nbsp Canadian sniper Sergeant Harold Marshall carries a No 4 Mk I T chambered in 303 British nbsp L42A1 sniper rifle chambered in 7 62 51mm NATODuring both World Wars and the Korean War a number of Lee Enfield rifles were modified for use as sniper rifles The Australian Army modified 1 612 53 Lithgow SMLE No 1 Mk III rifles by adding a heavy target barrel cheek piece and a World War I era Pattern 1918 telescope creating the SMLE No 1 Mk III HT HT standing for heavy barrel telescopic sight 13 which saw service in the Second World War Korea and Malaya and was used for sniper training through to the late 1970s 54 During the Second World War standard No 4 rifles selected for their accuracy during factory tests were modified by the addition of a wooden cheek rising piece and telescopic sight mounts designed to accept a No 32 3 5 telescopic sight 55 The telescopic sight had a field of view of 8 degrees 20 minutes and featured a bullet drop compensation range drum on top of the sight graduated in 50 yards 45 7 m increments from 0 to 1 000 yards 914 m Side adjustments in 2 MOA increments were made by the drum mounted at the side of the sight These rifles were designated as the No 4 Mk I T The accuracy requirement was ability to place seven of seven shots in a 5 inches 12 7 cm circle at 200 yards 183 m and six of seven shots in a 10 inches 25 4 cm circle at 400 yards 366 m The wooden cheek piece was attached with two screws The rear battle sight was ground off to make room to attach the No 32 telescope sight to the left side of the receiver Each No 32 and its bracket mount were matched and serial numbered to a specific rifle 56 In British service the No 32 telescope progressed through three marks with the Mk I introduced in 1942 the Mk II in 1943 which offered side adjustments in finer 1 MOA increments and finally the Mk III Mk 3 in 1944 which had an improved field of view of 8 degrees 30 minutes 57 A transitional model the No 32 Mk 2 1 was also made The Canadian scopes made by Research Enterprises Limited and were prefixed with a letter C and went through C No 32 Mk I Mk I A a transitional model Mk II and Mk 3 Many Mk 3s and Mk 2 1s Mk 2s Modified to Mk 3 standard were later modified for use with the 7 62 51mm NATO L42A1 sniper rifle They were then known by the designation Telescope Straight Sighting L1A1 Initial production was 1 403 conversions of 1931 1933 troop trials No 4 Mk I rifles at RSAF Enfield and a few others including Stevens Savage No 4s These were converted in late 1941 and into the later part of 1942 Then the work was assigned to Holland amp Holland the famous British sporting gun manufacturers which converted about 23 000 No 4 Mk I T and No 4 Mk I T sniper rifles The Holland amp Holland conversions usually have the contractor code S51 on the underside of the buttstock BSA Shirley undertook 100 conversions to 22 James Purdey and Sons fitted special buttstocks later in the war About 3 000 rifles mostly Stevens Savage appear to have been partially converted by Holland amp Holland but never received brackets scopes of the final T mark Canada converted about 1 588 rifles at Small Arms Limited to the end of 1945 and in 1946 at Canadian Arsenals Limited Both were located at Long Branch Ontario Most of the Canadian made No 4 Mk I T sniper equipments went into British service The No 4 T rifles were extensively employed in various conflicts until the late 1960s The British military switched over to the 7 62 51mm NATO round in the 1950s starting in 1970 over 1 000 of the No 4 Mk I T and No 4 Mk I T sniper rifles were converted to this new calibre and designated L42A1 46 The L42A1 sniper rifle continued as the British Army s standard sniper weapon being phased out by 1993 and replaced by Accuracy International s L96 58 22 training rifles edit Main article No 8 rifle Numbers of Lee Enfield rifles were converted to 22 calibre training rifles 59 in order to teach cadets and new recruits the various aspects of shooting firearms safety and marksmanship at a markedly reduced cost per round Initially rifles were converted from obsolete Magazine Lee Metford and Magazine Lee Enfield rifles 60 61 but from the First World War onwards SMLE rifles were used instead These were known as 22 Pattern 1914 short rifles 62 during The First World War and Rifle No 2 Mk IV 63 from 1921 onwards 64 They were generally single shot affairs originally using Morris tubes chambered for the cheap 22L cartridge and some larger types circa 1907 Some were later modified with special adaptors to enable magazine loading In 1914 Enfield produced complete 22 barrels and bolts specifically for converting 303 units and these soon became the most common conversion A five round 22 cal Parker Hiscock magazine was also developed and in service for a relatively short period during the later period of the First World War but was subsequently withdrawn from issue due to reliability problems with its quite complicated loading and feeding mechanisms 65 66 No 2 Mk IV rifles are externally identical to 303 calibre SMLE Mk III rifles the only difference being the 22 calibre barrel empty magazine case bolthead and extractor which have been modified to fire 22 calibre rimfire cartridges 67 After the Second World War the Rifle No 7 Rifle No 8 and Rifle No 9 all 22 rimfire trainers and target rifles based on the Lee action were adopted or in use with cadet units and target shooters throughout the Commonwealth the No 8 as of 2017 has been replaced among cadet forces due to obsolescence 68 69 In Britain a 22RF version of the No 5 rifle was prototyped by BSA and trialled with a view to it becoming the British Service training rifle when the 303 CF No 5 was initially mooted as being a potential replacement for the No 4 rifle 70 The C No 7 22 MK I rifle is a 22 single shot manually fed training version of the No 4 Mk I rifle manufactured at Long Branch 71 Production of this model was 1944 1946 and a few in 1950 to 1953 72 unreliable source Muskets and shotguns edit Conversion of rifles to smoothbore guns was carried out in several locations at various times for varying reasons SAF Lithgow in Australia produced shotguns based on the MkIII action under the Slazenger name chambering the common commercial 410 shotgun shell 73 Commercial gunsmiths in Australia and Britain converted both MkIII and No 4 rifles to 410 shotguns These conversions were prompted by firearms legislation that made possession of a rifle chambered in a military cartridge both difficult and expensive Smoothbore shotguns could be legally held with far less trouble RFI in India converted a large number of MkIII rifles to single shot muskets chambered for the 410 Indian musket cartridge These conversions were for issue to police and prison guards to provide a firearm with a much reduced power and range in comparison to the 303 cartridge A further likely consideration was the difficulty of obtaining replacement ammunition in the event of the rifle s theft or the carrier s desertion While British and Australian conversions were to the standard commercially available 410 shotgun cartridge though of varying chamber lengths the Indian conversions have been the source of considerable confusion The Indian conversions were originally chambered for the 410 Indian musket cartridge which is based on the 303 British cartridge and will not chamber the common 410 shotgun cartridge Many of these muskets were rechambered after being sold as surplus and can now be used with commercially available ammunition Unmodified muskets require handloading of ammunition as the 410 Indian Musket cartridge was not commercially distributed and does not appear to have been manufactured since the 1950s Numerous attempts have been made to convert the various single shot 410 shotgun models to a bolt action repeating model by removing the wooden magazine plug and replacing it with a standard 10 round SMLE magazine None of these is known to have been successful 74 though some owners have adapted three round magazines for Savage and Stevens shotguns to function in a converted SMLE shotgun or even placing such a magazine inside a gutted SMLE magazine Civilian conversions and variants edit From the late 1940s legislation in New South Wales Australia heavily restricted 303 British calibre and other military calibre rifles 75 so large numbers of SMLEs were converted to wildcat calibres such as 303 25 303 22 303 270 and the popular 7 7 54mm round 76 303 25 calibre sporterised SMLEs are very common in Australia today although ammunition for them has been very scarce since the 1980s 75 The restrictions placed on military calibre rifles in New South Wales were lifted in 1975 and many people who had converted their Lee Enfields to the wildcat rounds converted their rifles back to 303 British 75 Post Second World War SAF Lithgow converted a number of SMLE rifles to commercial sporting rifles notably the 22 Hornet model under the Slazenger brand 77 In the early 1950s Essential Agencies Ltd E A L of Toronto Ontario produced a run of several thousand survival rifles based on the No 4 action but lightened and shortened chambered in 303 British Serial numbers below 6000 were for civilian sale serial numbers 6000 and higher were built under contract to the Canadian government The Royal Canadian Air Force also used these as a survival rifle in the remote parts of Canada citation needed L59A1 Drill Rifle edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The L59A1 was a conversion of the No 4 rifle all marks to a drill purpose rifle that was incapable of being restored to a firing configuration It was introduced in service in the 1970s A conversion specification of No 1 rifles to L59A2 drill purpose was also prepared but was abandoned due to the greater difficulty of machining involved and the negligible numbers still in the hands of cadet units The L59A1 arose from British government concerns over the vulnerability of the Army Cadet Force and school Combined Cadet Forces CCF stocks of small arms to theft by terrorists in particular the Irish Republican Army following raids on CCF armouries in the 1950s and 1960s Previous conversions to drill purpose DP of otherwise serviceable rifles were 78 not considered to be sufficiently incapable of restoration to fireable state and were a potential source of reconversion spares L59A1 drill rifles were rendered incapable of being fired and of being restored to a fireable form by extensive modifications that included the welding of the barrel to the receiver modifications to the receiver that removed the supporting structures for the bolt s locking lugs and blocking the installation of an unaltered bolt the removal of the striker s tip the blocking of the striker s hole in the bolt head and the removal of most of the bolt body s locking lugs Most bolts were copper plated for identification A plug was welded in place forward of the chamber and a window was cut in the side of the barrel The stock and fore end were marked with broad white painted bands often with red bands and also rarely seen blue bands or stripes and the letters DP for easy identification Special service Lee Enfields Commando and automatic models editDe Lisle commando carbine edit Main article De Lisle carbine nbsp The initial wooden stocked De Lisle with a suppressorThe commando units of the British military requested a suppressed rifle for killing sentries guard dogs and other clandestine operational uses during the Second World War The resulting weapon designed by Godfray de Lisle was effectively an SMLE Mk III receiver redesigned to take a 45 ACP cartridge and associated magazine with a barrel from a Thompson submachine gun and an integrated suppressor 27 It was produced in very limited numbers and an experimental folding stock version was made Ekins automatic rifle edit The Ekins automatic rifle was one of the numerous attempts to convert a Lee Enfield SMLE to an automatic rifle 79 Similar developments were the South African Rieder automatic rifle and the New Zealand and Australian Charlton automatic rifles Howard Francis carbine edit Howard Francis self loading carbineTypeCarbinePlace of originUnited KingdomProduction historyDesignerHoward FrancisSpecificationsMass3 7 kg 8 2 lb Length812 mm 32 0 in Barrel length324 mm 12 8 in Cartridge7 63 25mm MauserRate of fireSemi automaticFeed system12 round box magazineSightsIron sightsThe Howard Francis self loading carbine was a conversion of a No 1 Mk III to the 7 63 25mm Mauser pistol cartridge 80 It fired in semi automatic only and suffered some feeding and extraction problems and despite meeting accuracy and soundness of design concept never made it past the prototype stage Howell automatic rifle edit Main article Howell automatic rifle The Howell automatic rifle was the first attempt to convert the Lee Enfield SMLE into a semi automatic rifle The weapon was reliable but unergonomic for the user as the force of the recoiling bolt interfered with handling Rieder automatic rifle edit Main article Rieder automatic rifle The Rieder automatic rifle was an automatic full automatic only Lee Enfield SMLE rifle of South African origin The Rieder device could be installed straight away without the use of tools Turner automatic conversion edit Long stroke piston tilting bolt semi automatic conversion developed by Turner Russel proposed for the canadian goverment in 1941 but was rejected 81 Conversion to 7 62 51mm NATO editIn 1954 the War Office adopted the 7 62 51mm NATO calibre L1A1 Self Loading Rifle for use by frontline infantry units While it was intended that rear echelon and reserve units would continue to use the Lee Enfield No 4 in order to avoid the expense of rearming those units with the L1A1 as well Britain s commitments as a NATO member meant that the 303in cartridge could no longer be used thus the early 1960s saw the approval of a plan to convert the Lee Enfield No 4 to the newer NATO cartridge 82 Rifles that were thus converted were re designated as the L8 series of rifles and refitted with 7 62 51mm NATO barrels new bolt faces and extractor claws new rear sights and 7 62 51mm NATO magazines The appearance of the L8 series rifles was no different from the original No 4 rifles except for the new barrel which still retained the original No 4 rifle bayonet lugs and magazine 83 82 The L8 series of rifles consisted of L8A1 rifles converted No 4 Mk2 rifles L8A1 T rifles converted No 4 Mk 1 T rifles 82 L8A2 rifles converted No 4 Mk1 2 rifles L8A3 rifles converted No 4 Mk1 3 rifles L8A4 rifles converted No 4 Mk1 rifles and L8A5 rifles converted No 4 Mk1 rifles The results of the trials that were conducted on the L8 series rifles were mixed the L8A1 T rifles fired test groups that bore no relation to those fired while they were still No 4 Mk 1 T rifles nor was there any consistent accuracy between those rifles that had been chosen for conversion while the regular L8 rifles gave a better performance but with little or no improvement over 303in weapons consequently the conversion programme was abandoned and what was now known as the Ministry of Defence was forced to expand the issue of L1A1 rifles to non frontline units 82 However experience from the programme including the magazine design was used to aid the later L42A1 conversion programme 84 85 In the late 1960s RSAF Enfield entered the commercial market by producing No 4 based 7 62 51mm rifles for sale The products were marketed under alliterative names e g Enfield Envoy a rifle intended for civilian competition target shooting and Enfield Enforcer a rifle fitted with a Pecar telescopic sight to suit the requirements of police firearms teams Sterling Armaments of Dagenham Essex produced a conversion kit comprising a new 7 62 mm barrel magazine extractor and ejector for commercial sale The main difference between the two conversions was in the cartridge ejection arrangement the Enfield magazine carried a hardened steel projection that struck the rim of the extracted case to eject it the Sterling system employed a spring loaded plunger inserted into the receiver wall Ishapore 2A 2A1 edit Main article Ishapore 2A1 rifle nbsp Ishapore 2A1At some point just after the Sino Indian War of 1962 the Rifle Factory Ishapore in India began producing a new type of rifle known as the Rifle 7 62 mm 2A which was based on the SMLE Mk III 86 and was slightly redesigned to use the 7 62 51mm NATO round Externally the new rifle is very similar to the classic Mk III with the exception of the buttplate the buttplate from the 1A SLR is fitted and magazine which is more square than the SMLE magazine and usually carries twelve rounds instead of ten 87 although a number of 2A1s have been noted with 10 round magazines Ishapore 2A and Ishapore 2A1 receivers are made with improved EN steel to handle the increased pressures of the 7 62 51mm round 88 and the extractor is redesigned to suit the rimless cartridge From 1965 to 1975 when production is believed to have been discontinued the sight ranging graduations were changed from 2 000 to 800 and the rifle re designated Rifle 7 62 mm 2A1 89 The original 2 000 yards 1 800 m rear sight arm was found to be suitable for the ballistics of the 7 62 51mm which is around 10 more powerful and equates to a flatter trajectory than that of the 303 British MkVII ammunition so it was a simple matter to think of the 2 000 as representing metres rather than yards It was then decided that the limit of the effective range was a more realistic proposition at 800 m The Ishapore 2A and 2A1 rifles are often incorrectly described as 308 conversions The 2A 2A1 rifles are not conversions of 303 calibre SMLE Mk III rifles Rather they are newly manufactured firearms and are not technically chambered for commercial 308 Winchester ammunition However many 2A 2A1 owners shoot such ammunition in their rifles with no problems although some factory loaded 308 Winchester cartridges may appear to generate higher pressures than 7 62 51mm NATO even though the rounds are otherwise interchangeable this is due to the different systems of pressure measurement used for NATO and commercial cartridges Manufacturers edit nbsp A Delhi Police marching contingent passes through the Rajpath during the rehearsal for the celebration of 60th Republic Day 2009 carrying the Indian version of the Lee Enfield SMLEIn total over 16 million Lee Enfields had been produced in several factories on different continents when production in Britain ended in 1956 at the Royal Ordnance Factory ROF Fazakerley in Liverpool after that factory had been plagued with industrial unrest The machinery from ROF Fazakerley was sold to Pakistan Ordnance Factories POF in Rawalpindi where production and repair of the No 4 Mk I started from 1952 till 1957 and then production changed over to No 4 Mk II from 1957 90 91 Also contributing to the total was the Rifle Factory Ishapore RFI at Ishapore in India which continued to produce the SMLE in both 303 and 7 62 51mm NATO until the 1980s and is still manufacturing a sporting rifle based on the SMLE Mk III action chambered for a 315 calibre cartridge 92 the Birmingham Small Arms Company factory at Shirley near Birmingham and SAF Lithgow in Australia who finally discontinued production of the SMLE Mk III with a final machinery proving batch of 1000 rifles in early 1956 using 1953 dated receivers During the First World War alone 3 8 million SMLE rifles were produced in the UK by RSAF Enfield BSA and LSA 93 nbsp The wristguard markings on a 1918 dated Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk III rifle manufactured by the London Small Arms Co Ltd The G R under the crown stands for George Rex and refers to the reigning monarch at the time the rifle was manufactured List of manufacturers edit Manufacturer markings of MLE CLLE and SMLE Mk I Mk III Marking Manufacturer CountryEnfield Royal Small Arms Factory Enfield United KingdomSparkbrook Royal Small Arms Factory Sparkbrook United KingdomBSA Co Birmingham Small Arms Company United KingdomLSA Co London Small Arms Co Ltd United KingdomLithgow Lithgow Small Arms Factory AustraliaGRI Rifle Factory Ishapore British IndiaRFI Rifle Factory Ishapore India Post Independence SSA and NRF markings are sometimes encountered on First World War dated SMLE Mk III rifles These stand for Standard Small Arms and National Rifle Factory respectively Rifles so marked were assembled using parts from various other manufacturers as part of a scheme during the First World War to boost rifle production in the UK Only SMLE Mk III rifles are known to have been assembled under this program GRI stands for Georgius Rex Imperator Latin for King George Emperor of India denoting a rifle made during the British Raj RFI stands for Rifle Factory Ishapore denoting a rifle made after the Partition of India in 1947 Manufacturer marks for No 4 Mk I No 4 Mk I and No 4 Mk 2 Marking Manufacturer CountryROF F Royal Ordnance Factory Fazakerley United KingdomROF M Royal Ordnance Factory Maltby United KingdomB The Birmingham Small Arms Company Limited United KingdomM47 and later M47C Birmingham Small Arms Factory Shirley United KingdomLong Branch Small Arms Limited and later Canadian Arsenals Limited CanadaSquared S and US property Savage Arms United StatesPOF Pakistan Ordnance Factories PakistanSecond World War UK production rifles had manufacturer codes for security reasons For example BSA Shirley is denoted by M47C ROF M is often simply stamped M and BSA is simply stamped B Savage made Lee Enfield No 4 Mk I and No 4 Mk I rifles are all stamped US property They were supplied to the UK under the Lend Lease programme during the Second World War No Savage Lee Enfields were ever issued to the US military the markings existed solely to maintain the pretense that American equipment was being lent to the UK rather than permanently sold to them 94 Australian International Arms No 4 Mk IV edit nbsp AIA M10 B2 match rifleThe Brisbane based Australian International Arms also manufactured a modern reproduction of the No 4 Mk II rifle which they marketed as the AIA No 4 Mk IV The rifles were manufactured by parts outsourcing and were assembled and finished in Australia chambered in 7 62 51mm NATO and fed from modified M14 magazines The No 4 Mk IV was designed with the modern shooter in mind and has the ability to mount a telescopic sight without drilling and tapping the receiver 95 AIA also offered the AIA M10 A1 rifle a jungle carbine styled version chambered in 7 62 39mm Russian which uses AK 47 magazines 96 Magazine supply and importation M14 and AK 10 single stack mag whilst legal in Australia has been spasmodically curtailed by Australian Federal Customs for more information see Gun politics in Australia It is possible to obtain a 10 round the maximum allowed by law M14 magazines for the M10 B2 match rifles in particular provided an import permit from the appropriate licensing services division can be obtained in some states yet Australian Federal Customs may still refuse importation on no valid grounds 97 Khyber Pass copies edit A number of British Service Rifles predominantly the Martini Henry and Martini Enfield but also the various Lee Enfield rifles have been produced by small manufacturers in the Khyber Pass region of the Pakistani Afghan border 98 Khyber Pass copies as they are known tend to be copied exactly from a master rifle which may itself be a Khyber Pass copy markings and all which is why it s not uncommon to see Khyber Pass rifles with the N in Enfield reversed amongst other things 99 The quality on such rifles varies from as good as a factory produced example to dangerously unsafe tending towards the latter end of the scale Khyber Pass copy rifles cannot generally stand up to the pressures generated by modern commercial ammunition 99 and are generally considered unsafe to fire under any circumstances 13 Khyber Pass copies can be recognised by a number of factors notably Spelling errors in the markings as noted the most common of which is a reversed N in Enfield V R Victoria Regina cyphers dated after 1901 Queen Victoria died in 1901 so any rifles made after 1901 should be stamped E R Edwardius Rex King Edward VII or King Edward VIII or G R Georgius Rex King George V or King George VI Generally inferior workmanship including weak or soft metal poorly finished wood and badly struck markings 99 Armalon edit British company Armalon Ltd 100 developed a number of rifles based on the Lee Enfield No 4 The PC gallery rifle is a carbine in pistol and revolver calibres the AL42 is a 5 56 mm rifle and the AL30C a carbine in 30 Carbine Contemporary service edit nbsp An Afghan mujahid carries a Lee Enfield in August 1985 nbsp A Rwandan soldier trains with a Lee Enfield 2011 nbsp Canadian Rangers photographed in Nunavut June 2011The Lee Enfield family of rifles is the second oldest bolt action rifle design still in official service after the Mosin Nagant 13 Lee Enfield rifles are used by reserve forces and police forces in many Commonwealth countries including Malawi In Canada the 303 and 22 models were being phased out between 2016 and 2019 The Canadian Rangers had been using the 303 model for over 70 years but switched to the Colt Canada C19 due to increasing lack of spare parts The Indian Army phased them out in 1990 92 replacing them with AKM type rifles see Indo Russia Rifles Indian police officers carrying SMLE Mk III and Ishapore 2A1 rifles were a familiar sight throughout railway stations in India after Mumbai train bombings of 2006 and the November 2008 Mumbai attacks They are also still seen in the hands of Pakistani and Bangladeshi second line police units However the Lee Enfield was mainly replaced in main line service in the Pakistani Police in the mid 1980s by the AK 47 in response to increasing proliferation of the Kalashnikov in the black market and civilian use In Jordan the Lee Enfield was in use with the Police and Gendarmerie until 1971 and with the Armed Forces until 1965 In Iraq and Egypt the Lee Enfield was replaced by the Kalashnikov as the standard issue rifle in the Armed Forces by the late 1950s and in Police Forces by the late 1970s In the UK the single shot 22 calibre Rifle No 8 is in regular use with UK Cadet Forces as a light target rifle 101 Enfields continue to be used as drill weapons by the National Ceremonial Guard of the South African National Defence Force SANDF as well as the Australian Defence Force Cadets 102 Many Afghans resisting the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan were armed with Lee Enfields 103 The CIA s Operation Cyclone provided hundreds of thousands of Enfields to the Afghan mujahideen funneling them through Pakistan s ISI CIA officer Gust Avrakotos later arranged for the Egyptian Ministry of Defence to set up production lines of Enfield 303 ammunition specifically for the conflict Later on when Avrakotos asked Michael Vickers to revamp their strategy he stopped the Enfield system and with the large amounts of money available thanks to Charlie Wilson replaced them with a mix of modern weapons like AK 47s and mortars 104 nbsp An SMLE owned by Maoist rebels in Nepal 2005 nbsp Change of command ceremony in Indonesian Army with colour guard holding Lee Enfield rifles 2013Khyber Pass Copies patterned after the Lee Enfield are still manufactured in the Khyber Pass region as bolt action rifles remain effective weapons in desert and mountain environments where long range accuracy is more important than rate of fire 13 Lee Enfield rifles are still popular in the region despite the presence and ready availability of more modern weapons such as the SKS 45 the AKM the Chinese Type 56 assault rifle and the AK 74 13 105 As of 2012 update Lee Enfield rifles are still being used by the Taliban 90 During the recent civil war in Nepal the government troops were issued Lee Enfield rifles to fight the Maoist rebels and the Maoists were also armed with SMLE rifles amongst other weapons Nepalese Police constables may also be usually seen equipped with SMLE rifles 106 Lee Enfield rifles have also been seen in the hands of both the Naxalites and the Indian police in the ongoing Maoist insurgency in rural India Police forces in both the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu continue to operate and maintain stocks of No 4 rifles 107 The Tongan security forces also retain a substantial number of No 4 rifles donated from New Zealand s reserve stocks 107 Lee Enfield rifles are used by the Jamaica Constabulary force for training recruits during field craft exercises and drills Civilian use editLee Enfields are very popular as hunting rifles and target shooting rifles Many surplus Lee Enfield rifles were sold in Australia Canada New Zealand South Africa the United Kingdom and the United States after the Second World War and a fair number have been sporterised having had the front furniture reduced or removed and a scope fitted so that they resemble a bolt action sporting rifle 13 Top notch accuracy is difficult to achieve with the Lee Enfield design 40 as it was intended to be a battle rifle rather than a sharpshooter s weapon 40 and thus the Enfield is nowadays overshadowed by derivatives of Paul Mauser s design as a target shooting arm They did however continue to be used at Bisley up into the 1970s with some success and continue to perform extremely well at Military Service Rifle Competitions throughout the world 13 Many people still hunt with as issued Lee Enfield rifles with commercial 303 British ammunition proving especially effective on medium sized game 13 Soft point 303 ammunition is widely available for hunting purposes though the Mark 7 military cartridge design often proves adequate because its tail heavy design makes the bullet yaw violently and deform after hitting the target 108 109 The Lee Enfield rifle is a popular gun for historic rifle enthusiasts and those who find the 10 round magazine loading by charger clips and the rapid bolt action useful for Practical Rifle events Since formation in 1998 organisations such as the Lee Enfield Rifle Association have assisted in not just preserving rifles in shooting condition many Lee Enfields are being deactivated and sold as wall hangers to collectors who do not hold a Firearms Licence in countries where they are required but holding events and competitions Lee Enfields are also popular with competitors in service rifle competitions in many Commonwealth countries The Lee Enfield series is very popular for service rifle shooting competitions in the UK and Australia due to the prohibitions on the legal ownership of semi automatic centrefire rifles in Great Britain and restrictions on the legal ownership of semi automatic centrefire rifles in Australia 110 111 For more information see Gun politics in the United Kingdom and Gun politics in Australia Rhineland Arms produces 45 ACP conversion kits for the Lee Enfield action using M1911 pistol magazines 112 The Lee Speed Sporter was a higher quality British made version of the Lee Enfield Rifle Factory Ishapore of India still manufactures a sporting hunting rifle chambered in 315 with a Lee Enfield action 113 Variants editMagazine Lee Enfield MLE 303 introduced 1895 114 Lee Enfield Cavalry Carbine Mk I LEC 303 introduced 1896 115 Magazine Lee Enfield Mk I 303 introduced 1899 116 Lee Enfield Cavalry Carbine Mk I 303 introduced 1899 115 New Zealand Carbine 303 Royal Irish Constabulary Carbine 303 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk I SMLE 303 introduced 1904 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk II 303 introduced 1906 Charger Loading Lee Enfield CLLE 303 introduced 1906 No 1 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk III 303 introduced 1907 No 1 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk III 303 introduced 1915 No 1 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk III HT 303 Heavy Barrel Telescopic Sight Australian sniper rifle No 1 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk V 303 introduced 1922 No 1 Short Magazine Lee Enfield Mk VI 303 introduced 1930 No 2 22 converted from 303 SMLE Mk III and Mk III No 2 Mk IV 22 No 2 Mk IV 22 No 4 Mk I 303 introduced 1931 No 4 Mk I T 303 sniper rifle converted from No 4 Mk I introduced 1941 No 4 Mk I 303 introduced 1941 No 4 Mk I T 303 Sniper rifle converted from No 4 Mk I introduced 1941 No 4 Mk 2 303 introduced 1949 No 4 Mk I 2 303 converted from No 4 Mk I to No 4 Mk 2 standard No 4 Mk I 3 303 converted from No 4 Mk I to No 4 Mk 2 standard No 5 Mk I Jungle Carbine 303 introduced 1944 No 6 Mk I 303 Australian experimental version of the No 5 Mk I No 7 22 No 8 Mk I 22 No 9 22 RCAF Survival rifle L8A1 7 62mm converted from No 4 Mk 2 L8A2 7 62mm converted from No 4 Mk I 3 L8A3 7 62mm converted from No 4 Mk I 3 L8A4 7 62mm converted from No 4 Mk I L8A5 7 62mm converted from No 4 Mk I L39A1 7 62mm L42A1 7 62mm L59A1 Drill Rifle converted from No 4 E A L Rifle built by Essential Agencies Limited E A L BA 93 a rifle grenade launcher made from surplus Lee Enfield parts which consist of stocks and receiver with a rifle grenade launcher in the chamber and a sheet metal buttstock while attaching a G3 type pistol grip 117 Users edit nbsp Turkish 8 57mm conversion of a Lee Enfield captured during World War I nbsp Members of the Milice of Vichy France armed with captured British No 4 Lee Enfield Rifles and Bren guns nbsp Unit of Cypriot National Guard with Sten Submachine guns and No 4 Lee Enfield Rifles in 1967 nbsp Afghanistan 118 119 120 nbsp Algeria 121 nbsp Australia No 1 MkIII MkIII manufactured at Lithgow Arsenal in Lithgow New South Wales 53 122 nbsp Austria used post war by the Gendarmerie citation needed nbsp Bangladesh Extensively used during 1971 war 90 Used by Police Ansar and BNCC personnel for several years No longer in active service nbsp Belgium post WW2 123 British and Canadian donations were used by Belgian soldiers in the Korean War until 1952 citation needed post WW2 used by the Belgian Gendarmerie until the 1980s when it was replaced by the FN FAL nbsp Belize 124 nbsp Bermuda used by the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps 124 nbsp Brunei used by the Royal Brunei Armed Forces and Royal Brunei Police Force during the early days 125 replaced by M16 series nbsp Botswana 126 nbsp Canada 11 122 The No 4 rifle was manufactured starting in 1941 by Small Arms Limited and later by Canadian Arsenals Limited in Long Branch Ontario Canada The Canadian Militia received the MK I Long Lee Enfield rifle in 1896 They used this rifle in the Boer War 1899 to 1902 They used the MK III amp MK III in World War I as well as the No 4 Lee Enfield in World War II the Korean War and into the late 1950s The No 4 rifle is still used for drill and was used for range shooting by the Royal Canadian Army Cadets Royal Canadian Sea Cadets and the Royal Canadian Air Cadets Most units are stripped of the mechanism that fires the round but at many Cadet Training Centres the rifles are in full working order the rifle is used at the Vernon Summer Training Center for Feu du joix The No 4 was being phased out by the Canadian Rangers as a service rifle starting in 2016 nbsp Newfoundland Main service rifle in both World War I and World War II 127 nbsp Cambodia used by the Royal Khmer Army 128 nbsp Central African Republic 129 nbsp Chadian FROLINAT 130 nbsp Republic of China 1912 1949 used during Warlord Era 131 Some Chinese soldiers in Burma also received British Lee Enfield No 4 Mk Is 132 nbsp Cyprus The Lee Enfield was the main rifle of the Cypriot National Guard from 1960 when the Republic of Cyprus was established until 1980 when it was replaced by the G3A3 nbsp Denmark used as Rifle M 45E by the Danish brigade in occupied Germany from 1945 eventually replaced by the US M1 rifle as Rifle M 50 in 1950 133 nbsp Kingdom of Egypt 134 nbsp Ethiopian Empire acquired after World War I 135 nbsp Finland some stored in depots after the Finnish Civil War 136 nbsp Fiji 124 nbsp French Third Republic Free French Forces 137 138 and French Resistance used it during World War II 139 Some captured from the Resistance were used by the pro Nazi French militia Milice francaise 140 see picture Some were used in Indochina 141 nbsp Gambia 142 nbsp Nazi Germany some captured No 1 Mk III Lee Enfields were used by the Volkssturm in 1944 and 1945 143 The German designation was Gewehr 281 e 144 nbsp Ghana 124 replaced in the 1960s by L1A1s 145 nbsp Greece Used by Hellenic armed forces during World War II and post World War II period 146 Greece used the Lee Enfield and British small arms until they were replaced by the M1 Garand and American small arms nbsp Guyana 142 nbsp Hong Kong Used by the Hong Kong Defence Force 147 nbsp Hungary 142 nbsp Iceland 142 nbsp India In service with British Indian Army throughout the First and Second World Wars 148 nbsp India In service during the Indo Pakistani War of 1965 149 Now made under licence by Rifle Factory Ishapore as the Ishapore 2A1 rifle the rifle is still used by the Indian police 150 nbsp Indonesia 142 Used by republicans in Indonesian National Revolution some were handed down from the Dutch after they left Indonesia 151 nbsp Italy post World War II Italian Army and Navy 152 142 nbsp Kingdom of Iraq 11 Still used in small numbers in 2004 by Iraqi insurgents 153 nbsp Ireland No1 MkIII III used as the service rifle by the National Army during the Civil War and later by Defence Forces replaced by No4 Lee Enfields in 1950 s until replaced by the FN FAL in 1961 11 The second line reserve the Forsa Cosanta Aitiuil FCA continued using the Lee Enfield as its primary service rifle until 1990 when the FN FAL began to replace it 154 Also captured from British forces etc and used by Irish Republican Army during War of Independence Lee Enfield rifles were still in the arsenal of the Provisional IRA at the outset of The Troubles in Northern Ireland and were reportedly used in at least one INLA sniper attack as late as 1989 155 156 nbsp Israel used during the first few years of independence 157 158 nbsp Jamaica 142 still used by the Jamaica Constabulary Force Correctional Services and Jamaica Combined Cadet Force nbsp Empire of Japan Captured from British Army during World War II 159 nbsp Jordan Arab Legion used Mk III and No 4 variants 160 nbsp Katanga bought for police force but also used by army 161 nbsp Kenya 142 nbsp Latvia 162 nbsp Lesotho 142 nbsp Libya 163 nbsp Luxembourg 142 used by the Luxembourg detachment in the Korean War citation needed nbsp Malawi 142 nbsp Malaysia 164 also used by the Malayan National Liberation Army 165 nbsp Malta 142 nbsp Mato Grosso do Sul 166 nbsp Myanmar 142 used by the Myanmar Army after the Burmese Independence 167 and also by the Myanmar Police Force for ceremonial purposes citation needed nbsp Namibia Non governmental armed groups 142 nbsp Nepal 150 nbsp Netherlands Both the Lee Enfield No 1 Mark III and No 4 Mark I would be adopted in 1941 and serve until 1952 until replaced by the M1 Garand 168 nbsp New Zealand 11 nbsp Nigeria Used by the Nigeria Regiment and then by Nigerian Army 169 nbsp Biafra Used by militias 170 and Army 171 nbsp Norway Received from Allied airdrops to the resistance fighters during World War II and given by Britain to the Norwegian Brigade during the occupation of Germany in 1947 Returned to Britain in 1952 in exchange for P 17 rifles A total of 24992 303 rifles were in Norwegian inventory at the time Replaced by M1 Garand and M1 carbines 172 nbsp Oman 124 nbsp Ottoman Empire Captured rifles used as reserve weapons 173 nbsp Pakistan 150 nbsp Papua New Guinea 174 nbsp Poland used by the Polish Armed Forces in the West 175 nbsp Portugal used by the Portuguese Expeditionary Corps during the First World War 176 The SMLE Mk III was still in service as m 917 during the 1940s 177 nbsp Rhodesia 178 179 nbsp Rwanda 180 nbsp Sierra Leone 124 nbsp Singapore 124 reserve units until the late 1960s Still used by Singapore Armed Forces Military Police Command for ceremonial purposes nbsp Solomon Islands used by the Royal Solomon Islands Police Force 107 nbsp Somalia 142 nbsp Union of South Africa 11 nbsp South Sudan 142 nbsp South Yemen citation needed nbsp Spanish Republic 181 nbsp Sudan 142 nbsp Sri Lanka Phased out in the late 1960s with the arrival of the L1A1 SLR 182 nbsp Swaziland 142 nbsp Tanzania 142 nbsp Tibet 183 nbsp Thailand the contract was concluded on 10 December 1920 when the king received shipment of 10 000 rifles 184 nbsp Tonga 107 nbsp Trinidad amp Tobago 142 Trinidad amp Tobago Cadet Force nbsp Turkey converted Ottoman captured rifles to 7 92 57mm Mauser 173 nbsp Uganda 142 nbsp United Arab Emirates 142 nbsp United Kingdom 164 185 nbsp United States Used by units of the American Expeditionary Force attached to British and Australian units during the First World War 186 187 No 4 MkI MkI rifles manufactured by Savage Stevens Firearms under Lend Lease for the British and Commonwealth forces during World War II Some US Army units attached to British Commonwealth units in Burma during WWII were issued Lee Enfield rifles on logistics grounds nbsp Vanuatu 107 nbsp Vietnam Việt Minh captured Lee Enfields from French forces 188 189 nbsp South Vietnam 107 nbsp Yemen 142 190 nbsp Yugoslav Partisans 191 192 nbsp Zambia 193 better source needed page needed better source needed nbsp ISIL Used by ISIL insurgents in 2019 194 See also editList of clip fed firearms Table of handgun and rifle cartridges Videos on Lee Enfield riflesNotes edit Contre les Mau Mau Encyclopedie des armes Les forces armees du monde in French Vol XII Atlas 1986 pp 2764 2766 Fourteen days in Cyprus Maclean s Vol 77 no 12 20 June 1964 pp 14 15 amp 36 42 Neville Leigh 25 August 2016 Modern Snipers General Military Osprey Publishing p 30 ISBN 9781472815347 Cashner Bob 2013 The FN FAL Battle Rifle Oxford UK Osprey Publishing p 36 ISBN 978 1 78096 903 9 Cashner 2013 p 51 Smith Colin 6 July 2014 Cyprus divided 40 years on a family recalls how the island was torn apart The Guardian a b Skennerton 1993 p 153 230 a b Rifle Short Magazine Lee Enfield The Lee Enfield Rifle Website Archived from the original on 22 September 2010 Retrieved 13 May 2010 a b c d e Skennerton 2007 p 90 a b Hogg 1978 p 215 a b c d e f Skennerton 2007 p 587 Skennerton 2007 p 264 a b c d e f g h i j k l Wilson 2007a Skennerton 2007 p 60 Skennerton Ian Arms and Militaria Bulletin Board Retrieved 28 January 2009 Skennerton 2007 p 159 Tucker 2013 p 279 Skennerton 2007 p 91 Skennerton 2007 p 453 454 Skennerton 1997 p 8 Skennerton 1994c p 5 LOC 11715 Skennerton 2007 p 132 Skennerton 2007 p 126 a b c Skennerton 1994c p 9 Skennerton 2007 pp 132 161 a b Skennerton 2001a p 7 a b Skennerton 2007 p 161 Skennerton 1994c p 7 Skennerton 2007 p 171 172 Statistics of the military effort of the British Empire during the Great War 1914 1920 London HMSO 1922 p 473 Statistics of the military effort of the British Empire during the Great War 1914 1920 London HMSO 1922 p 479 Skennerton 2007 p 338 Lithgow Small Arms Factory Museum www lithgowsafmuseum org au THE 256 INCH BRITISH A LOST OPPORTUNITY by Anthony G Williams Archived 6 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine a b Skennerton 1994c p 8 a b c Skennerton 2007 p 187 Skennerton 2007 p 189 194 Skennerton 1994b p 5 a b c d Smith 1979 p 21 Skennerton 2007 p 406 a b Skennerton 1994b p 9 Skennerton 2007 p 230 Pegler 2012 p 36 Pauly Roger 28 April 2008 Firearms The Life Story of a Technology JHU Press ISBN 9780801888366 a b Skennerton 1994b p 7 Skennerton 1994b p 6 a b c Wilson 2006 Skennerton 1994a p 8 Skennerton 1994a p 7 Skennerton 2007 p 349 Skennerton 2007 p 347 a b Skennerton 2007 p 345 Skennerton 2004a p 36 Skennerton 2007 p 227 Keefe Mark A IV 2007 British Lee Enfield No 4 T Sniper Rifle American Rifleman August 88 The Lee Enfield Rifle London Reading and Fakenham Cox and Wyman Limited 1960 Major E G B Reynold p 170 172 Enfield Enforcer Amstevens fsnet co uk Archived from the original on 24 February 2009 Retrieved 28 January 2009 Lee Enfield and other Training Rifles and Associated Equipment in 22RF and other miniature calibres N R A U K Historic Arms Resource Centre Retrieved 14 February 2012 Lee Enfield Rifle RF Short Mks I and II II N R A U K Historic Arms Resource Centre Retrieved 14 February 2012 Skennerton 2007 pp 481 483 SHOT Backwards Design Company Lee Enfield Rifle 22RF Pattern 14 N R A U K Historic Arms Resource Centre Retrieved 14 February 2012 1 dead link Skennerton 2007 p 484 489 Lee Enfield Pattern 18 303 cum 22 II N R A U K Historic Arms Resource Centre Retrieved 14 February 2012 Skennerton 2007 p 484 488 Skennerton 2007 p 489 Lee Enfield and other Training Rifles and Associated Equipment N R A U K Historic Arms Resource Centre Retrieved 14 February 2012 Skennerton 2007 p 504 509 Lee Enfield Rifle No 5 22RF N R A U K Historic Arms Resource Centre Retrieved 14 February 2012 The Lee Enfield Rifle C No 7 Canadian N R A U K Historic Arms Resource Centre Retrieved 14 February 2012 Badger 1944 C No 7 22 Caliber Lee Enfield Training Rifle www milsurps com Skennerton 2007 p 379 Griffiths 1998 a b c Enright 1998 Skennerton 2007 p 351 Skennerton 2007 p 549 HARC Reference Site Www rifleman org uk Rifleman org uk Ian Skennerton Special Service Lee Enfields Commando and Auto Models Published by Ian D Skennerton PO Box 80 Labrador 4215 Australia 2001 ISBN 0 949749 37 0 Paperback 48 pp 50 plus b amp w drawings and photos 210 274 mm Special Service Lee Enfields Commando and Auto Models by Ian Skennerton Published by Ian D Skennerton 2001 ISBN 0 949749 37 0 Turner Semiauto SMLE Conversion YouTube YouTube 23 December 2023 Archived from the original on 23 December 2023 Retrieved 9 March 2024 a b c d Houghton Steve 25 November 2021 British Sniping Rifles since 1970 Osprey Publishing pp 6 7 ISBN 9781472842350 Skennerton 2007 p 255 260 Skennerton 2007 pp 260 264 Houghton Steve 25 November 2021 British Sniping Rifles since 1970 Osprey Publishing pp 8 9 ISBN 9781472842350 Skennerton 2007 p 515 Skennerton 2007 p 370 Skennerton 2004b p 5 Skennerton 2004b p 14 a b c Pegler 2012 p 70 Milsurps Knowledge Library 1961 No 4 Mk2 Mfg by Pakistani Ordnance Factory POF in 1961 www milsurps com 315 Sporting Rifle Indian Ordnance Factories Retrieved 28 January 2009 Skennerton 2007 p 171 Skennerton 2007 Chapter 15 Improved Enfield Rifles Australian International Arms Rifles Lawrance Ordnance Archived from the original on 3 August 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2009 Skennerton 2007 p 553 Firearms Act SCHEDULE 2 Part 8 b accessed 11 January 2010 Skennerton 2007 p 368 a b c Skennerton 1993 p 334 The Armalon Web Site Company web site Archived from the original on 5 August 2018 Retrieved 20 December 2014 Lee Enfield Rifle No 8 for the British Forces UK N R A Historic Arms Resource Centre Retrieved 30 January 2009 Mashamaite Kgabo 8 April 2012 The SANDF opens the 2012 Rand Easter Show South African Department of Defence Archived from the original on 29 December 2016 Retrieved 20 October 2016 Modern Warfare Published by Mark Dartford Marshall Cavendish London 1985 Charlie Wilson s War The Extraordinary Story of the Largest Covert Operation in History George Crile 2003 Grove Atlantic Infantry No Known Cure for the AK 47 Disease Strategypage com 12 April 2010 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Legacies of War in the Company of Peace Firearms in Nepal PDF Nepal Issue Brief 2 Small Arms Survey 5 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London collection nam ac uk Magazine Lee Enfield Mk I Rifle www awm gov au TFB TV 2 November 2018 Guns of the Tatmadaw Burmese Myanmar Small Arms Development Archived from the original on 30 October 2021 via YouTube Anistoriton An Essay Anistor gr Retrieved 14 February 2012 Afghan War Rugs A Sub group with Iranian Influence Rugreview com Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Photo from Getty Images Daylife com 24 July 2008 Archived from the original on 18 March 2012 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Windrow Martin 1997 The Algerian War 1954 62 Men at Arms 312 London Osprey Publishing p 46 ISBN 978 1 85532 658 3 a b Hogg Ian 2002 Jane s Guns Recognition Guide Jane s Information Group ISBN 0 00 712760 X Smith 1969 p 212 a b c d e f g Bonn International Center for Conversion Lee Enfield SMLE PDF Report SALW Guide Global distribution and visual identification p 3 Harun Abdul Majid 2007 Rebellion in Brunei The 1962 Revolt Imperialism Confrontation and Oil 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June 2013 archived from the original on 22 December 2015 Major E G B Reynolds 1960 The Lee Enfield PDF London Reading and Fakenham Cox and Wyman Limited External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lee Enfield rifle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lee Enfield amp oldid 1216488772, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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