Good find. You have a “smelly” a Short Magazine Lee Enfield. In .303 British with cup discharger (grenade launcher) for the “Mills Bomb”, check if the “can “ is steel or a plastic copy, if is real its$$$$. The other Enfield is a standard No.4 model issued to the UK forces,the US markings denote they were made in the US for the allies under the lend lease program.
I wonder if it could be a " Grenade launcher " from many deaths ago. Load a blank and the blank would strike the primer of the " grenade " and launch it? That would be really cool.
Hi good afternoon, is buying and selling used safes a good business? I'm interested in safes and vaults and kinda wondering how would you go about it. Thank you!
The 1st rifle with the " can " on the muzzle break, looks to be Peruvian. Not sure of the caliber. The " flag " colored on it is from Peru. Dating from the mid/late 30's to the 40's...... Possibly a 7.65 caliber type.
Oh My Lord! Can't imagine the way you handle those rifles! Keep your fingers off the iron please and DO NOT EVER LOOK INTO THE FIRING END OF ANY FIREARM! I DON'T CARE IF THE BOLT WAS OUT! IT SETS A DANGEROUS PATTERN! How bad was this that a girl had to tell you that? btw my 30-30 is gettin' low on fuel.
@@jaystevens3548 I wouldn't just due to the age of it and the value in history. Yet, your choice, does it appear solid? have you scoped the barrel to see if there are any hair line cracks? Your call a good one. Hang it on the wall.
It does appear solid, Barrel is intact but like you said and I agree, The historic value is worth more than a pile of metal and wood. I need to find a top notch gunsmith and have em do a thorough inspection. @@gracealonewretchedtoredeem4413
@safecrackerbot9742 it's a website for locksmiths and safe and Vault technicians to educate each other on their techniques and how play get certain safes and volts open and the repairs and talk to each other without all the noise it's a little outdated but it's still pretty cool