I believe the US 1917 and the P-17 follow the same procedures. The link at the bottom of this page is to the US 1917 section of surplusrifle.com. That is an excellent website with information on surplus rifles and handguns.
The most common rifle in WWI would have been: * the Russion 7.62R Mosin Nagant Model 91; * the British and Commonwealth .303 Lee Enfield No.1 MK III; * the German 7.92 mm Gew98 (later shortened and designated the 98K) Mauser; * the French 8x50R Berthier and Lebel rifles (both used in huge quantities); * the Italian 6.5mm Carcano; * the Austrian 8x50R Steyr-Mannlicher M1895; and, * the American 30.06 Springfield (M1903) and P17 Enfield. Additonally, both some South African troops in central Africa and Portugese troops in both Africa and Europe used the 7 mm Mauser, typically in the Gew88 pattern. Regards Richard Wm ShortOttawa - Canada
They used underground mines to blow up their enemies trenches.They also used guerrilla warfare to sneak up on them.
There are 26 letters, so there is no exact "halfway". M and N are 13th and 14th, splitting the halfway point.
As of October 2009 a Deactivated Winchester P17 30-06 rifle in good condition is worth £300 to £400.
Yes they did, i have one sporterised. It is marked M1917 Remington on the top of the reciever.
The "Model of 1917" is more commonly called the 'P17 Enfield' and was a standard US service rifle in WW-1 and in some arenas of WW-2. Winchester was just one of the makers, others being Remington and the arsenal at Eddystone. Would need to know the complete markings on either rifle to go further. sales@countrygunsmith.net
They included rifles, pistols and revolvers, shotgun, machine guns and cannon. From a rifle standpoint, the US used 30-06 rifles (the 1903 Springfield and the P17 Enfield) Britain used the SMLE in .303, Germany used the 8mm Mauser, France used the 8mm Lebel, and Russia used the 91/30 Mosin-Nagant.
Red
no
The most common rifle in WWI would have been: * the Russion 7.62R Mosin Nagant Model 91; * the British and Commonwealth .303 Lee Enfield No.1 MK III; * the German 7.92 mm Gew98 (later shortened and designated the 98K) Mauser; * the French 8x50R Berthier and Lebel rifles (both used in huge quantities); * the Italian 6.5mm Carcano; * the Austrian 8x50R Steyr-Mannlicher M1895; and, * the American 30.06 Springfield (M1903) and P17 Enfield. Additonally, both some South African troops in central Africa and Portugese troops in both Africa and Europe used the 7 mm Mauser, typically in the Gew88 pattern. Regards Richard Wm ShortOttawa - Canada
Yes. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p17.pdf read page 253 upper right hand corner
Yes. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p17.pdf read page 253 upper right hand corner
No It is NOT Recommended. The Beeman P-17 has a rifled barrel. Forcing a bb through the barrel will ruin the rifling and the accuracy of the pistol permanently.
They used underground mines to blow up their enemies trenches.They also used guerrilla warfare to sneak up on them.
This website I'm providing has all the possible information you'll ever need when it comes to filing your late federal income taxes: http://www.irs.gov/publications/p17/ch01.html.