I asked my father-in-law why he did not bring the rifles home as shooters. He responded that they had collected a lot of late war manufactured rifles they did not consider shooters and they were not allowed to take the rifles out of Japan. By converting the rifles to lamps he was allowed to take them as household furniture.
The bolt face has been drilled out and the firing pin and spring are missing. There is a second cut in the bolt body. I am not sure if this cut was made to disable the bolt. The safety knob is missing off the back of the bolts. The wiring for the lamp is routed down the muzzle, into the magazine box (minus spring and carrier) into the bolt cut and out the bolt into the stock exiting the heavy metal base.
The floor plate in the original lamp had a toggle switch which turns on a small lamp in the base. There was glass between the legs in the base. You can see the hole in the floor plate that held the toggle for the lower lamp in the base.
These items were broke in the many moves after Japan to U.S. Army bases in Alaska, Virginia, and Fort Bragg, North Carolina. When the father-in-law retired the rifles made a few more moves.
I am thinking one rifle is of early manufacture and not the late war product. The production of the Type 99 started in 1939. The rifle shown is serial #49xxx; the second rifle is serial #7xxxxxx
A friend’s dad had one when we were kids. I think it was a shooter, but his dad always said it was not a safe rifle to shoot. At one time there was one converted to 257 Roberts in a local shot but it was like trying to sell road kill. There was a lot of Springfield’s, M96 Swedes, and British Enfield’s to be had.
When my father-in-law returned to the States he bought a 30-06.
The more I polish on the rifles and have them broke down the more respect I have for them.