And these will have been sent by the importer to a British Proof House before they were sent on to a dealer.The Ruger Precision Rifle offers interchangeable barrels from the factory, not to mention Blaser, Sauer and Mauser.
And these will have been sent by the importer to a British Proof House before they were sent on to a dealer.The Ruger Precision Rifle offers interchangeable barrels from the factory, not to mention Blaser, Sauer and Mauser.
Yes, actually the manufacturers do. For example, the SA80 series of weapons had a branch of the London Proof House set up at the factory in Enfield to proof every single weapon/pressure bearing part, since they were manufactured in the UK. When a subsequent upgrade of the same series of weapons was done in Germany, they were re-proofed in Germany, whose proof marks are accepted by the UK by the CIP treaty. But if you look at the smaller production weapons, like pistols or sniper rifles, .50 cal machine guns or even .50 sub-caliber inserts for 120mm tank guns, they will all bear proof marks, from either UK or CIP proof houses.
The UK military or any other British Government organisation cannot acquire/use small arms that do not have an acceptable proof mark. There is no Crown immunity to the Gun Barrel Proof Act.
As I understand it even a tank barrel is proofed?
S
BS.Sounds like a load of BS to me.
Millions of Americans buy and use the same guns as they send over here, but they don’t have then proofed for their own use, because it’s not necessary.
Does our military send it’s weapons to the proof house? No.
Proof houses are money making scams (Don’t start on moderators) that have had their day.
Any “Gunsmith” that thinks his work need to go to the proof house before it’s safe to use is in the wrong job.
Ken
I see your point but wonder if people would agree with the same opinion but applied to a different product.................Given modern manufacturing and materials, the whole issue of MOTing cars is indeed an outdated and mostly pointless exercise.
But it's a legal requirement. I can't see it changing though. As it would need a change in the law, and to ask politicians to remove something that they will be told is there for public safety.
So we are probably stuck with it, till they ban private car ownership altogether.
I've seen 50 cal machine guns being proofed on a military range. A big export order, each was supplied with two barrels, the proof house chap turned up with a big box of proof rounds, which were also oiled, he was kept busy proofing them all and stamping the marks on before they were then test fired for accuracy and interchangeability without re-sighting before being exported to the customer.Section 120 Act not to apply to Barrels above specified Size.
Provided always, that this Act shall not apply to any Barrel adapted for the Discharge of a Ball of a greater Weight than One Pound and Three Quarters, or to any Barrel of a Bore exceeding in every Part thereof the Diameter of Two Inches.
The internal diameter of barrels on main battle tanks are generally above 50.8mm these days (think 105m or 120mm), so are not required to be proofed by the Proof Houses before being taken into service. They would of course go through a proof process at the manufacturer, and that would be reviewed as part of the purchase contract with the MOD.
And I suggest the proof rounds would defeat the snail drum bullet catchers, assuming you could even fix the gun into a vice.................
Yes, been there, done that. Hythe is always a lovely day out, especially when it is horizontal rain.I've seen 50 cal machine guns being proofed on a military range. A big export order, each was supplied with two barrels, the proof house chap turned up with a big box of proof rounds, which were also oiled, he was kept busy proofing them all and stamping the marks on before they were then test fired for accuracy and interchangeability without re-sighting before being exported to the customer.
Together with a load more spare barrels.
So, no, proofing does not have to take place at a proof house, other arrangements can be made. Tank barrels included.
Proofing is a waste of time in this day and age. Especially when you consider that metal fatigue can be present, and still survive proofing (near term) and fail (long term) later.BS.
Say a gunsmith builds a rifle using a second hand action of unknown history, new barrel, maybe chambered for something quite different, higher pressure, even modifies the bolt face and/or machines it for a different extractor or bushes the firing pin hole. All bets are off until it has been re-proofed.
Point of information, a club member had a brand new Remington 700 which lost a chunk of the bolt head on first usage with factory ammo. It had passed proof, but there must still have been an inherent weakness there. New bolt and re-proof was needed, that's all that was offered by the importer. Personally I'd have insisted on a brand new replacement of the whole thing, but at the time that was going to be a long wait. ISTR she got rid of it once repaired, and not for another Remington.
Complacency as in "it's a strong action, it'll cope just fine" is not an option, nevermind when used by reloaders who insist on pushing things much further. To the extent that every round fired might be equal to or even above the proof test load.
Section 120 Act not to apply to Barrels above specified Size.
Provided always, that this Act shall not apply to any Barrel adapted for the Discharge of a Ball of a greater Weight than One Pound and Three Quarters, or to any Barrel of a Bore exceeding in every Part thereof the Diameter of Two Inches.
The internal diameter of barrels on main battle tanks are generally above 50.8mm these days (think 105m or 120mm), so are not required to be proofed by the Proof Houses before being taken into service. They would of course go through a proof process at the manufacturer, and that would be reviewed as part of the purchase contract with the MOD.
And I suggest the proof rounds would defeat the snail drum bullet catchers, assuming you could even fix the gun into a vice.................
Punt guns tend be proofed with black powder. Some modern punt guns I have seen have been put together more robustly than artillery pieces and it would be extremely difficult to overload them with black powder!interesting. So that would exempt many punt guns which I didn’t think was right
Ie a 2 gauge or bigger
S
So what is the point of the proof house....you pay your money, your gun passes, but then it fails you?BS.
Say a gunsmith builds a rifle using a second hand action of unknown history, new barrel, maybe chambered for something quite different, higher pressure, even modifies the bolt face and/or machines it for a different extractor or bushes the firing pin hole. All bets are off until it has been re-proofed.
Point of information, a club member had a brand new Remington 700 which lost a chunk of the bolt head on first usage with factory ammo. It had passed proof, but there must still have been an inherent weakness there. New bolt and re-proof was needed, that's all that was offered by the importer. Personally I'd have insisted on a brand new replacement of the whole thing, but at the time that was going to be a long wait. ISTR she got rid of it once repaired, and not for another Remington.
Complacency as in "it's a strong action, it'll cope just fine" is not an option, nevermind when used by reloaders who insist on pushing things much further. To the extent that every round fired might be equal to or even above the proof test load.
So how would a spare barrel be proofed..And these will have been sent by the importer to a British Proof House before they were sent on to a dealer.
No such thing.By fitting it to a universal receiver![]()
No such thing as a universal receiver?No such thing.
You really are bored aren’t you, I’ve never seen you on here so much (or so well behaved on a forum!)Well, yes...
A perhaps misplaced attempt at humour.![]()