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Old 1st December 2014, 07:12 PM   #1
spiral
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Quote:
Originally Posted by trenchwarfare
In the middle east, markings have nothing to do with mfg. Yes, the font of the maker name looks modern. That doesn't mean it's not an English made gun. I've seen several Royal Afghan mfg. rifles, that have been scrubbed, and English markings added. Done I guess, to appeal more to the GIs. I was going by the fact that the lock looks English, and the trigger guard is heavily made military, not the sheet metal guards you usually see on these type guns. And I could be wrong.
Thank you for sharing your viewpoint... Although your reference, Afghanistan is not in the middle east....

I would agree the trigger guard looks legitimate, every other angle in stock & lock is off. The bolt holding the hammer is also clearly not English, never mind London made.

The fact modern fakes from Afghanistan, with a few original parts mixed in, {Of origin unknown.} you regard as legitimate is strange.

I State origin unknown as I presume you know many of the Royal Afghan Army rifles were made in Kabul etc. as well? Not just the UK?
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Old 1st December 2014, 08:51 PM   #2
kahnjar1
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Origin of the gun COULD be English, but as has been mentioned above there have been many locks with fake markings. It is NOT a SNIDER gun as suggested by Teodor. These had side hinged breeches and were not muzzleloaders.
The decoration style (in parts) looks Yemeni, but in fact could have originated anywhere, and may not even be very old as "ageing" is/was very cleverly done to fool the unwary.
A nice piece just the same and I like it very much.
As a note of caution, please check that it is not still loaded......
Stu
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Old 1st December 2014, 09:57 PM   #3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kahnjar1
It is NOT a SNIDER gun as suggested by Teodor. These had side hinged breeches and were not muzzleloader
The design copies the 1853 Enfield....

The stock design angles are different from the English ones though.

spiral
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Old 1st December 2014, 10:04 PM   #4
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kahnjar1
Origin of the gun COULD be English, but as has been mentioned above there have been many locks with fake markings. It is NOT a SNIDER gun as suggested by Teodor. These had side hinged breeches and were not muzzleloaders.
Good point, I should have paid more attention. And I agree that it is very likely a local imitation of an English lock as well.

Teodor
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