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Old February 1, 2014, 04:53 AM   #21
gyvel
Senior Member
 
Join Date: August 30, 2009
Location: Northern AZ
Posts: 7,172
Quote:
pattern 1914 enfield. it's almost identical to the US model 1917 except it is chambered in the standard 303 brit cartridge. it was a short lived design. the brits were caught up in an arms race with the rest of europe and with most nations switching to mausers, british brass felt that this may be a way to go so they commissioned remington to make them a rifle resembling a mauser and the result was the 1914. however with WWI in full swing the brits decided that it would be best to just stick with what they had on hand so very few P14s were built and used. like the enfield number 1 and US 1917, it is a cock on close design.
Not quite...

The Pattern 14 was the evolution of the Pattern 13, a rifle that the British had developed in a very hot, high velocity. 276 calibre cartridge, and was based largely on the Mauser action. When WWI broke out in 1914, the Brits stopped work on the cartridge, and, finding themselves woefully short of service rifles, contracted with Remington and Winchester to re-engineer and produce the Pattern 13 rifle in .303 British. Remington produced rifles at the Ilion factory and the Eddystone plant, while Winchester produced them at their facility. When the British orders were terminated, production began on a slightly modified version, in .30-06 calibre, and became known as the U.S. Model 1917.

All totaled, at least 750,000 Pattern 14 rifles were made in the U.S. before the order was terminated.
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