Which of the Enfield P53 reproductions is the best, and which are the ones to be avoided?
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The current Pedersoli was developed with authenticity in mind. The fellow who wrote & published 'The Civil War Musket; Lock, Stock, and Barrel' was a consultant and that's probably the 'standard' at this point. In fact, the several small 'cottage industry' shops that offered 'de-farbing' of muskets went out of business largely because of the Pedersoli offering. (I think his name is Craig Barry, and he is a well known Civil War era material culture researcher.)Good luck!Which of the Enfield P53 reproductions is the best, and which are the ones to be avoided?
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I've got all older Parker-Hales so I may be a bit biased I can only judge by what I've read, it's a roll of the dice. Some are nice, others finished poorly. Hopefully it was just a passing QC problem caused by Covid. Others will chime in too on their experiences who have bought them recently. No longer produced, the fit and finish on the English P-H rifles set the bar high for others IMHO.Thank you @Whitworth
What have you heard about the Pedersoli. They are pretty pricey too, but are they worth it?
The trouble with these straight grain stocks is the musket grain through the wrist. It's a weak point ang pretty much guarantees a break after a while.I thought they wanted more stocks out of a blank, and more of a straight grain for a stronger stock. I’m sure the elite were not concerned about the shooting comfort of the lower classes…..I don’t like the way the enfield handles either…
This was still the technique in 1916 in the British Army shooting manual.The idea was to shoot the rifle with your chest facing the target.
The Parker-Hale’s have progressive depth rifling (that gets shallower from breech to muzzle), as do the originals. It is uniform 1 in 78 twist, again as the original. It is NOT gain twist - where the pitch of rifling increases from breech to muzzle.I had a Armi Sport, it functioned fine, traded it for aParker Hale, only difference the PH had gain twist rifling and was partial to .577 diameter
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