Historic SMLE “Mad Minute” at 300 yard target

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024

Комментарии • 60

  • @dannyw.814
    @dannyw.814 9 месяцев назад +6

    Excellent shooting and outstanding bolt manipulation. I don't believe most individuals realize the skills involved in your display. Spot on!!

    • @chrismair8161
      @chrismair8161 4 месяца назад

      I do. I own my Grandfathers Rifle.

  • @dukkha62
    @dukkha62 3 года назад +4

    I had an uncle in the Australian Army who served in the Korean war and he told me that while there was no official requirement for a soldier to attempt the mad minute, most soldiers (who were WWII vets anyway) would give their best to try and break the record - and just as well they did. During one battle when there were human waves of Chinese rushing their entrenched position he heard his NCO call out "mad minute fire - commence". Apparently the slaughter was so horrendous that the numerically superior Chinese were driven back and rounds were eventually cooking off in the chambers of the SMLEs. At this stage the order was given to fix bayonets and advance at the charge while the terrified Chinese tried to hide in long grass or behind hay stacks.

  • @michaelcarey3105
    @michaelcarey3105 2 года назад +3

    You're twice as fast with that #1 rifle than I am with my M1A, maybe more so! Great shooting and video!

  • @presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889
    @presidentlouis-napoleonbon8889 4 года назад +4

    Great video that actually follows the British military standard manual.

  • @nomadpi1
    @nomadpi1 Год назад +1

    The SMLE shows that the British did make an effective battle rifle.

  • @nigel900
    @nigel900 3 месяца назад +1

    A minute of madness is about all you can afford with the cost and scarcity of .303 ammo…

  • @mikeryan9479
    @mikeryan9479 4 года назад +3

    Great video Brett and congratulations on the release of your new book.

  • @samuel10125
    @samuel10125 3 года назад +3

    I remember hearing a story from the early days of WW1 when British soldiers first encountered German forces they fired so quickly the Germans thought they where being shot at by machine guns.

    • @geezerp1982
      @geezerp1982 Год назад

      dont tell the liberals or the UK D.O.J this or they scream to ban bolt action assault rifles

    • @samuel10125
      @samuel10125 Год назад

      @geezerp1982 Shhhhh stop giving them tag lines "fully semi-automatic" was bad enough.

  • @Nords1982
    @Nords1982 3 года назад +1

    Amazing, after watch many video' this one is king of them all. You got skills

    • @papercartridges6705
      @papercartridges6705  3 года назад +2

      I'm going to try it again, with a better set up. Shooting from the prone, at a target uphill, was very awkward. But I don't know if I'll ever approach the record, Captain Wallingford must have been half-man half-beast.

  • @thinkfocus
    @thinkfocus 5 месяцев назад

    Great work and very inspiring Brett.
    Using the Hornady Cam-lock puller, I busted down some 1956 MKVII to make dummy rounds to practice this. I think I need to solder the bullets into the cases, as they pushed back in. But I found rapid reload and rapid fire are HARD to do well.

  • @jasondarby2749
    @jasondarby2749 3 года назад +1

    Nice shooting. You easily exceeded the rapid fire standard of 15 rds in one minute.
    Something I ran across on a British Lee - Enfield site suggested that there was a problem wit some of the magazines not reliably being loadable with two full chargers. So it was suggested to load one charger, fire one or two rounds and then load another. Might be something to consider if your Lithgow has a less than mint magazine.

    • @nomadpi1
      @nomadpi1 Год назад +1

      The difference in what you suggested is the difference between a hot barrel and a cold barrel. Something artillery and tank gunners are familiar with.

  • @petercollingwood522
    @petercollingwood522 Месяц назад

    Interesting. The picture of Wallingford with his tunic emblazoned with badges and medals shows a different rifle. Lee Metford. I wonder if that was the rifle he used for his range exploits?

  • @leighrate
    @leighrate 3 года назад +1

    Fired 50 rounds.
    Killed 37 Bosche.
    I'd consider that a good days work.

  • @simonblair-beal3952
    @simonblair-beal3952 3 года назад +2

    Fantastic effort, the Brilliant SMLE. By the way, here in Australia, Lithgow is pronounced "Lithgo". Great video

  • @Oligodendrocyte139
    @Oligodendrocyte139 4 месяца назад

    Snoxall most certainly existed. For example, I tracked down a newspaper article where he was cited in the divorce of another instructor. Whether he held any sort of record though, well I have no idea.

  • @stephenmcmanua6251
    @stephenmcmanua6251 3 года назад +1

    great shooting, I'm with you guys on the Snoxall record, Wallingford was a documented combat soldier as well as shooting in the Olympics.
    Only advice I can give on speed would be to learn to stop pulling your head back while working the bolt as it shouldn't be required if your buttstock is the right length for you but that would only add perhaps 1 round per minute

    • @papercartridges6705
      @papercartridges6705  3 года назад +1

      I have a lot of bad habits I need to fix! I’m used to shooting Mausers and they have a longer bolt throw and I have to move my head. I try to remember that I don’t have to do that with the enfield but I always forget and go back to habit. Guess I just need to shoot more! Thanks for the comment, we are definitely on the same page.

  • @fredflintstome6532
    @fredflintstome6532 3 года назад

    Bloody good effort! Well done from Australia

  • @sinisterthoughts2896
    @sinisterthoughts2896 Год назад

    Impressive shooting!

  • @ogilkes1
    @ogilkes1 3 года назад

    Very fine exercise. Thanks.

  • @anglerjj3089
    @anglerjj3089 3 года назад +1

    this was the hell of a shooting 👍

  • @jamesross1799
    @jamesross1799 4 месяца назад

    There very definitely was a "mad minute " in the british army pre ww1 and up to the present. Most soldiers could probably manage around 8 to 12 12 of course requiring a re load. I'm talking properly aimed shots on target.

  • @martinpanks992
    @martinpanks992 3 года назад +1

    No other rifles action comes even close to the speed and smoothness of the Lee Enfield SMLE.

    • @papercartridges6705
      @papercartridges6705  3 года назад +3

      It’s definitely a sweet action. The Krag is pretty dang smooth too. For being essentially a “first generation” military bolt rifle, the SMLE soldiered on for a long time!

    • @windogendoors7566
      @windogendoors7566 3 года назад

      @@papercartridges6705 I second that the Krag is a very smooth action. I love it.

    • @geezerp1982
      @geezerp1982 Год назад

      @@papercartridges6705 the only rifle to beat the lee enfield is the garand - with its self loading action

  • @barrytaylor6565
    @barrytaylor6565 3 года назад

    well done, first one ive seen for a long time shooting 303 corrsectly.

  • @Schlachtschule
    @Schlachtschule 4 года назад +1

    Great video! Is there any chance the SGM Wallingford's rifle was in any way special? Could it have been accurized in some way, or "slicked up" to speed the action somehow?

    • @papercartridges6705
      @papercartridges6705  4 года назад +2

      I am not sure, those are great questions! We do know that the rifle was fast and accurate, and if he was reloading that quickly, the charger clips must have been smooth and clean.

  • @samlincoln
    @samlincoln 3 года назад

    Solid effort, mate.

  • @user-fg8yl2pm7w
    @user-fg8yl2pm7w Год назад

    303Vic Australia NO4 (New)................did you grease bolt up before action..? did you put any vas on your parm.. did you make shore you loaded all stripper clips best posable. did you make shore The Lips on your MAG are best posable..If Not Dont Start.....Or else you can get very close .....OR make it...............TRY HARDER ....or low velos ammo

  • @fishyc150
    @fishyc150 3 года назад

    Did they never just change the complete mag for a preloaded one? What is the point of a detachable mag if it's not used?

    • @papercartridges6705
      @papercartridges6705  3 года назад +4

      The magazine detached for cleaning and maintenance. In very early British magazine rifles, the magazines were actually connected to the rifle by a little chain! In the late 19th century and early 20th, magazines were expensive and time consuming to make. Before machine stamping was developed, each magazine was soldered together by a worker. With smaller capacities (like 5 to 10 rounds) it was just as fast, or even faster, to reload with charger clips.

    • @fishyc150
      @fishyc150 3 года назад

      @@papercartridges6705 thank you, I'd always wondered about that!

  • @drboris01
    @drboris01 3 года назад

    You have the green cadet band on yours too

    • @papercartridges6705
      @papercartridges6705  3 года назад

      Lithgow 1941. It’s a very nice rifle.

    • @drboris01
      @drboris01 3 года назад

      @@papercartridges6705 I have a 1916 Enfield that found its way to Australia, probably at the end of WW1. It was FTR'd at Lithgow in 1944 and issued to the cadet corps. The green band denotes "Cadet issue, safe for ball ammunition"

  • @audraserbus8341
    @audraserbus8341 3 года назад

    39 hits inside 16'' at 200 yards bulletin.accurateshooter.com/tag/mad-minute-challenge/

  • @GizmoDuck_1860
    @GizmoDuck_1860 Год назад

    I both love and hate the SMLE. Being British, I feel I have to like shooting it and I'm not that bad of a shot with mine, but there's just something that doesn't... fit when I shoulder it, maybe I need a different butt length. I've shot the Mad Minute with mine, and no, no may not ask the results 😆 though I did outshoot a guy who has a scoped 7.62mm in hitting an A4 piece of paper at 200 yards, the fact that he hadn't zerod in his scope is not a factor... 😁

    • @papercartridges6705
      @papercartridges6705  Год назад

      My SMLE fits me naturally and perfectly which is why I think I like it so much.

  • @jusportel
    @jusportel 3 года назад

    Good to see someone with proper shooting technique, elbow directly under the rifle. Always bugs me to see people holding the rifle like a shotgun! 😺

  • @texrifleman
    @texrifleman 3 года назад

    RUclips SAFETY POLICE ACCEPT YOUR CLEAR WEAPON! Carry on.

  • @fredricknolan3905
    @fredricknolan3905 3 года назад

    My No.4 could hold 11 in the mag and 1 in the pipe. If I had known about stripper clips then I probably would have tryed doing a mad minute in a offhand position.

    • @papercartridges6705
      @papercartridges6705  3 года назад +2

      The trick is to polish the interior of the clips very slightly with some steel wool and light oil. The cartridges will slide through them like greased butter.

  • @TheMwarrior50
    @TheMwarrior50 4 года назад

    0:40 Audio is.... debateable

    • @papercartridges6705
      @papercartridges6705  4 года назад

      I know... I may have to do a voiceover eventually. Whenever there is any wind at all, my cheap microphone fails.

  • @TheMwarrior50
    @TheMwarrior50 4 года назад

    "Union infantry at the battle of the Somme"

    • @papercartridges6705
      @papercartridges6705  4 года назад +1

      That’s my US Army Ordnance Department kepi. Its what Ordnance officers would have worn in the Civil War.

  • @jjohnston94
    @jjohnston94 3 года назад

    I wouldn't have commented at all, but for your snotty "preemption". Shoot that well with human waves of Turks coming at you, the way Wallingford must have.