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Jollygreenslugg wrote:G'day folks,
A 1918 Lithgow SMLE is a good weapon. As one who collects milsurps in general and Lee-Enfields in particular, I'll always enjoy the memories of my first, which was also a 1918 Lithgow.
As to returning them to military trim, stock sets can be found at Springfield Sporters or Numrich in the US (as Old SAR Pilot mentioned). These seem to be mainly ex-Indian drill-purpose wood, which is darker than the Queensland Maple used on 1918 Lithgows or the Coachwood used during/after WW2, in which many earlier rifles were restocked when going through the factory refurbishment program. So, it's certainly not difficult in the US to return such a rifle to military trim, but finding the correct Aussie wood will be a challenge. I'd still return it to military trim though, as incorrect wood is still better than the sporter condition.
Agent86, I'm willing to bet that your rifle was one of the John Jovino put-togethers, as evidenced by the P&W info on the paperwork. When the Australian government sold off the war reserve SMLEs in the eighties, they wouldn't sell them to anyone in Australia. The John Jovino Co of New York bought the rifles plus a large quantity of spares. These spares included enough components to assemble thousands of 'new' rifles, which were serialled in a new sequence. Good fun, but not much collector value these days.
If you have any more questions, please ask. I'm a big fan of these rifles and have a collection of all major variants from the black-powder Lee-Metford of 1888 (mine is 1889-dated) to the last of the No4 Mk2s of the late 50s.
Some videos which may be of interest;
http://www.youtube.com/user/Jollygreenslugg
Cheers,
Matt