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Old 10th March 2015, 04:33 AM   #1
trenchwarfare
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Default Afghan Tribal Martini Henry

This one, is a little different from your typical Khyber Pass Martini. Barrel is octagon, instead of round. Shows many years use, and abuse. I'm thinking, the spurious British markings, could have been added later on? Love the field repair, and "original" sling. The cleaning rod, and Chinese coin in the stock, are my additions.
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Old 10th March 2015, 04:52 PM   #2
David R
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I think this may have ended up in Tribal hands, but looking at the octagonal barrel and the textured upper flat , I think it started life as a Civilian model hunting rifle. The type of sights would be another clue.
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Old 10th March 2015, 09:35 PM   #3
Will M
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The markings under the forestock look legit. What calibre is it, .303 or 450?
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Old 11th March 2015, 03:18 AM   #4
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Bore measures 1/2", so around .50 caliber.
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Old 11th March 2015, 04:30 AM   #5
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To know which cartridge it fires, a chamber casting would help and slugging the bore for an accurate bore measurement.
Who used 50 cal ammo at the time this was made? British was .577 and .450
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Old 12th March 2015, 04:10 PM   #6
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Which caliber it fires, is really a moot point. Got it as a wallhanger, and wouldn't dare shoot it anyway. Any chance of a translation of this script? I know it's pretty hard to see. Oops, I thought I had it rotated.
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Old 13th March 2015, 08:45 PM   #7
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Default Caliber clarification

Quote:
Originally Posted by Will M
To know which cartridge it fires, a chamber casting would help and slugging the bore for an accurate bore measurement.
Who used 50 cal ammo at the time this was made? British was .577 and .450
Early British cal for these rifles was 577/450 (a necked cartridge), not .577 AND .450.
Later models were in .303 British cal.
A pic of the early foil version of the 577/450 is shown here.
Stu
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