Enfield No. 2
Enfield No.2 Mk I* Revolver | |
---|---|
.380" Revolver Mk I or Mk IIz | |
Calibre | 0.38 inch (9.65 mm) |
Action | Double-action revolver (Mk I single/double action, Mk I* and Mk I** double action only) |
Rate of fire | 20–30 rounds/minute |
Muzzle velocity | 620 ft/s (189 m/s) |
Effective firing range | 15 yards (13.7 m) |
Maximum firing range | 200 yd (182.8 m) |
Feed system | 6-round cylinder |
Sights | fixed front post and rear notch |
The Enfield No. 2 was a British top-break revolver using the
History
After the First World War, it was decided by the British Government that a smaller and lighter .38 calibre (9.2 mm) sidearm firing a long, heavy 200 grain (13 g) soft lead bullet would be preferable to the large Webley service revolvers using the
Webley sued the British Government for £2,250, being "costs involved in the research and design" of the revolver. Their action was contested by Enfield, who stated that the Enfield No 2 Mk I was actually designed by Captain Boys (the Assistant Superintendent of Design, after whom the
RSAF Enfield was unable to manufacture enough No. 2 revolvers to meet the military's wartime demands, and as a result Webley's Mk IV was issued as a substitute standard for the British Army.
Variants
There were three main variants of the Enfield No 2 Mk I revolver. The first was the Mk I which had a full-spur hammer and was double-action/single-action, meaning the shooter could either thumb-cock the hammer before pulling the trigger or could pull the trigger with the hammer uncocked; some shooters preferred the latter option as the trigger pull is much lighter with the hammer cocked. The handgrips were made of wood. This version was made until 1939, when a change order introduced the Mk I*. About 55,000 Mk Is were made, and an unknown number were converted to Mk I* during factory repair, as required by the change order that created the Mk I*. See: Stamps, Mark, and Ian Skennerton, .380 Enfield Revolver No. 2 for further information.
The second variant was the Mk I*, which had a spurless hammer and was
The third variant was the Mk I**, which was a 1942 variant of the Mk I* simplified in order to increase production, but was discontinued shortly thereafter as a result of safety concerns over some of the introduced modifications.
The vast majority of Enfield No 2 Mk I revolvers were modified to Mk I* during World War II, generally as they came in for repair or general maintenance;[11] It is believed that the reason was that the Mk I* version was cheaper and faster to manufacture and allowed for far quicker training.[16] When used in the manner in which British forces trained (rapid double-action fire at very close ranges), the No 2 Mk I* is at least as accurate as any other service pistol of its time, because of the relatively light double-action trigger pull. It is not, however, the best choice for deliberately aimed, long-distance shooting — the double-action pull will throw the most competent shooter's aim off enough to noticeably affect accuracy at ranges of more than 15 yards (14 m) or so.[3] Despite officially being declared obsolete at the end of World War II, the Enfield (and Webley revolvers) were not completely phased out in favour of the Browning Hi-Power until April 1969.[17]
The Enfield No 2 is very fast to reload—as are all British
Ammunition
The Enfield No.2 Mk I was designed for use with the Cartridge S.A. Ball Revolver .380 inch Mk. I and Mk. Iz, a deviation of the .38 Smith & Wesson cartridge, also known as the .38/200. It had a 200 gr (13 g). unjacketed round-nose, lead bullet of .359 inch diameter that developed a muzzle velocity of 620–650 ft/s (190–200 m/s).
Just prior to the outbreak of the Second World War, British authorities became concerned that the soft unjacketed lead bullet used in the 380/200 might be considered as violating the Hague Convention of 1899 governing deforming or 'explosive bullets'. A new .38 loading was introduced for use in combat utilizing a 178-grain (11.5 g), gilding-metal-jacketed lead bullet; new foresights were issued to compensate for the new cartridge's ballistics and change to the point of aim.[14] The new cartridge was accepted into Commonwealth Service as "Cartridge, Pistol, .380 Mk IIz", firing a 178 - 180 grain (11.7 g) full metal jacket round-nose bullet. The 380/200 Mk I lead bullet cartridge was continued in service, originally restricted to training and marksmanship practice.[14] However, after the outbreak of war, supply exigencies forced British authorities to use both the 380/200 Mk I and the .380 Mk IIz loadings interchangeably in combat. U.S. ammunition manufacturers such as Winchester-Western supplied 380/200 Mk I cartridges to British forces throughout the war.[19]
Other manufacturers
The vast majority of Enfield No 2 revolvers were made by RSAF (Royal Small Arms Factory) Enfield, but wartime necessities meant that numbers were produced elsewhere. Albion Motors in Scotland made the Enfield No 2 Mk I* from 1941 to 1943, whereupon the contract for production was passed onto Coventry Gauge & Tool Co. By 1945, 24,000[20] Enfield No 2 Mk I* and Mk I** revolvers had been produced by Albion/CG&T. The Singer Sewing Machine Company of Clydebank made components but they were assembled at Enfield under their proofmarks; Singer-made parts are marked "SSM".
The Howard Auto Cultivator Company (HAC) in New South Wales, Australia tooled up and began manufacturing the Enfield No 2 Mk I* and I** revolvers in 1941, but the production run was very limited (estimated at around 350 or so revolvers in total), and the revolvers produced were criticised for being non-interchangeable, even with other HAC-produced revolvers. Very few HAC revolvers are known to exist, and it is thought by many collectors that most of the HAC revolvers may have been destroyed in the various Australian Gun Amnesties and "Buy-Backs".
Users
- Australia
- Botswana[21]
- Canada
- Gambia[22]
- Israeli Military Industriesfrom 1951 to 1974, standard issue sidearm for Israeli Police and Border Police to 1975 and for the IDF to 1968.
- Lesotho[22]
- Libya[23]
- Malaysia[24]
- Pakistan — Standard issue sidearm for Pakistan Army officers till 1974, for Pakistan Police till 1989.
- Myanmar: Retired[25]
- Philippines — The Enfield No 2 Mk I Revolver was used by the Philippine Commonwealth military and recognized guerrillas during World War II from 1942 to 1945 and used by the Philippine military during the post-war era from 1945 to 1960s and the Hukbalahap Rebellion from 1946 to 1954.
- Sri Lanka
- United Kingdom
- Rhodesia
- Netherlands: used in Indonesia[26]
- New Zealand[27]
See also
Notes
- ^ Stamps, Mark, and Ian Skennerton, .380 Enfield Revolver No. 2, page 11.
- ^ Stamps, Mark, and Ian Skennerton, .380 Enfield Revolver No. 2, page 9.
- ^ a b c Smith, W.H.B, 1943 Basic Manual of Military Small Arms (facsimile), page 11.
- ^ Shore, C. (Capt), With British Snipers to the Reich, Paladin Press (1988), pp. 200-201
- ^ Weeks, John, World War II Small Arms, London: Orbis Publishing Ltd. (1979), p. 76: "the standard pistol training ammunition allocation per soldier was only 12 rounds per year"
- ^ Shore, C. (Capt), With British Snipers to the Reich, Paladin Press (1988), p. 201
- ^ Shore, (1988) p. 202
- ^ a b Barnes, Frank C., Cartridges of the World, 6th ed. DBI Books (1989), p. 239
- ^ Maze, Robert J., Howdah to High Power, page 103.
- ^ § A6862, LoC
- ^ a b § B2289, LoC
- ^ § B6712, LoC
- ^ Stamps, Mark, and Ian Skennerton, .380 Enfield Revolver No. 2, page 12.
- ^ a b c Dunlap, Roy, Ordnance Went Up Front, Samworth Press (1948), p. 141
- ^ a b c Weeks, John, World War II Small Arms, London: Orbis Publishing Ltd. (1979), p. 76
- ^ Wilson, Royce, "A Tale of Two Collectables", Australian Shooter magazine, March 2006.
- ^ Stamps, Mark, and Ian Skennerton, .380 Enfield Revolver No. 2, page 118
- ^ Stamps, Mark, and Ian Skennerton, .380 Enfield Revolver No. 2, page 79
- ^ Shore, C. (Capt.), With British Snipers to the Reich, Paladin Press (1989), p. 201
- ^ Hogg, Ian V., and John Walter.Pistols of the World, 4th Ed.
- ^ Jane's Infantry Weapons 1987. Janes Information Group. 1987. p. 976.
- ^ ISBN 978-0-7106-0889-5.
- ^ "World Infantry Weapons: Libya". Archived from the original on 5 October 2016.
- ^ "Weapons of the Police and Auxiliary Forces in Malaya".
- ISBN 978-981-230-848-1.
- (PDF) from the original on 4 August 2020.
- ISBN 9781780961118.
References
- Smith, W.H.B. 1943 Basic Manual of Military Small Arms (facsimile). Harrisburg, Penn.: Stackpole Books, 1979. ISBN 0-8117-1699-6.
- Stamps, Mark, and Ian Skennerton. .380 Enfield Revolver No 2. London: Greenhill Books, 1993. ISBN 1-85367-139-8.
- Gerard, Henrotin. "Enfield no 2 revolver explained". HLebooks.com, November 2018.