I was indeed fortunate to get that rifle, A friend of mine
ran into some problems with Uncle Sam due to a disagreement
over how much income Tax they each thought was fair !
He lost the arguement and was forced to come up with some
money "Really Fast"... He owned a Hardware store back when
Surplus rifles started coming into the country and there was a lot
more to choose from. (11 mm Mausers, 6.5 Krags from Norway,
Rolling Blocks from South America, 88 Commission rifles from
Germany, 8 mm Guedes just to name a few he had.)..
As far as accuracy, It will fire clover leaf groups at 100 meters
but so will my No. 4 MkI * , It too wears a scope but a much more
modern one. They Both have unusual rifling though, The No. 4
only has 2 grooves ? and the T3 has something similar to the
octagonal rifling in a Glock pistol.. I have read that Holland
& Holland created and fitted these barrels on the T3's for
the British War Department... I have found that American
ammo does not group nearly as well as the Surplus Ball
out of these two rifles. Groups open up to a couple of inches
with it. They were designed for the old Cordite rounds and
shoot them qute well so that is what I feed them. My S.M.L.E.
on the other does not care, It will group at about 1 1/2 inch with
anything I fire through it and it has a really dark bore to boot..
The British made some ugly rifles, But they don't need to be pretty
to put a bullet on target. I also have a P-14 Enfield and a Jungle
carbine... The P-14 is truely a thing of beauty.. Nice lines,
Great sights, Very good accuracy.. But I would have hated to have carried
one in combat! It is way to heavy and has terrible balance for a
military rifle..I could not imagine bayonet drill with that thing !
But it is Pretty! The Jungle carbine, well...
I don't even waste bullets in it anymore.. I can't even keep half
the rounds in a magazine full on a 12 inch paper plate at 100 meters.