Enfield Wood Work
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Enfield Wood Work
Hi all,
Does anyone know from what type wood the wood work on a '47 No.5 was made?
More importantly does anyone know how they were originally finished? (i.e. oiled or varnished?)
Thanks in advance,
Mick.
Does anyone know from what type wood the wood work on a '47 No.5 was made?
More importantly does anyone know how they were originally finished? (i.e. oiled or varnished?)
Thanks in advance,
Mick.
Re: Enfield Wood Work
Look in THE BOOK
Enfield Story, by Ian Skennerton
All your answers, plus the answers to the questions that you have not yet thought of...
Enfield Story, by Ian Skennerton
All your answers, plus the answers to the questions that you have not yet thought of...
Re: Enfield Wood Work
Usually beech on post-war new build rifles, oiled with linseed oil. Do you have a picture?
Re: Enfield Wood Work

Beech sounds about right, havent got a picture of how it is at the moment as im sanding away a dozen layers of varnish.
Saddler, that looks a cracking book but I'm not paying £150!
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Re: Enfield Wood Work
Henry Krank has the Skennerton book in stock at £49-95, it is 608 pages of brilliant information in hard back.Stuck wrote:guys,
Beech sounds about right, havent got a picture of how it is at the moment as im sanding away a dozen layers of varnish.
Saddler, that looks a cracking book but I'm not paying £150!
ukrifleman.
Re: Enfield Wood Work
Try ABE books they deal in second hand books.
Re: Enfield Wood Work
Most No5s built by BSA and Fazakerley were stocked in beech, however the earlier pattern wood without a nosecap was often walnut.
India later made a very large number of replacement wood sets for their No5s, and this wood is a dense grain type that also resembles walnut.
India later made a very large number of replacement wood sets for their No5s, and this wood is a dense grain type that also resembles walnut.
Re: Enfield Wood Work
Just to add my bit to the wood refinishing, make sure you use raw and not boiled linseed oil, raw is the correct military finish.
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