How Lee-Enfield No.4 Forend Stocking-Up Works
Bloke on the Range
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13m
Bloke takes his Lee-Enfield No.4 apart (a rare event, since unless you've got to dry a sopping wet rifle, no good can come of it) to show how the forend is attached to the metal. It's not obvious, and it's rather clever.
Also there's a few verbal digressions railing against the common unthinking myths, and the relative positions of SMLE's, No.4's and P14's in British shooting competitions back in the .303 days.
Up Next in Bloke on the Range
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BotR trip to SBAM in Italy: Day 1
Bloke takes a train from quiet Switzerland to noisy Milan to meet Kevin of SBAM shooting. Please go subscribe to their channel here! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_7GHCVbjCdwWMQWueqTu2A
There'll be lots of content coming up in the next weeks, both on BotR and on SBAM, so you'll probably wa...
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Mad Minute Series: Lee-Enfield No.4
Finally. The first "proper" installment in the Mad Minute series! In which The Bloke geeks out with the footage and data he got! This one is the Lee-Enfield No.4 in .303 British (natch), to serve as the baseline. Target is 18-20m away, in case I forgot to say it in the vid.
Sorry for the echo ...
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Lindybeige's 4 Mad Minutes! Swiss K31...
Lloyd, of the Parish of Lindybeige rapid fires four rifles under so-called "Mad Minute" conditions - a Swiss Schmidt-Rubin K31, Mauser Kar98k, a Lee-Enfield No.4 and a US M1 Garand. How did he get on?