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No5 Jungle Carbine

http://www.patreon.com/ForgottenWeapons https://www.floatplane.com/channel/ForgottenWeapons/home Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! http://shop.forgottenweapons.com Today I am concluding our series on the standard-issue Lee Enfield system with the No5 MkI - the "jungle carbine". Developed in 1943 as a shorter and handier pattenr of rifle than the No4, the carbine went into production in 1944 and saw use during World War Two. It featured a number of lightening cuts, as well as a shortened barrel, conical flash hider, side-mounted sling, 800-yard sights, and rubber buttpad. Unfortunately, the No5 was beset by a problem of "wandering zero". A significant number of the rifles failed to properly hold zero when they were widely issued. The problem was never fully resolved, but appears to have been the result of receiver flex due to the lightening cuts. Efforts to fix it were essentially abandoned, as it was recognized that a new self-loading rifle was going to be adopted soon, and it would be a waste of time and money to continue development of the Lee Enfield by that point. Contact: Forgotten Weapons 6281 N. Oracle 36270 Tucson, AZ 85740

Comments

Anonymous

Thanks Ian! Love my number 5, but I admit to using a shoulder saver with it. Just a bit of kick from that .303 out of such a light rifle and that original rubber butt pad is hard as a rock at this point.

Anonymous

I remember when my dad was able to get these for $90 USD at a Roses Department store. Every week or so they'd get a load of surp guns in barrels and sell them for dirt cheap. All manner of Lee-Enfields, Vz.52s, SkSs.... I think he still has at least one of these rifles. He gave me a Lee-Ishapore and an SKS.

Anonymous

As you said in the beginning, the term Jungel Carbine is not particularly correct. These came to Norway in May 1945, with the Pegasus Parachute Regiment in Operation Doomsday. I can’t see much jungel around here. :-)

Cleo45

Great summary, love this carbine, fun to shoot, easy to haul around and luckily for me, my example from October 1946 does not seem to have any wandering zero issues. Although marked for export by the British in 1964, my carbine has no US importer stamps indicating it came to the US before the provisions of the Gun Control Act of 1968 were enacted. Thanks for posting this video on a really cool if forgotten weapon!

Anonymous

I love the Jungle carbine. It looks cool!

Anonymous

Just took delivery of a Jungle Carbine. Cool gun but takes a bit of getting used to. Really appreciate this and your other videos on this carbine.

Anonymous

Britain’s answer to the M1 carbine?