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What can you do to scratch your Martini Henry itch at International Military Antiques? Looks like you can do a lot. First off you can buy a Martini Henry from the Nepalese hoard at pretty reasonable prices. A cleaned up nice long lever Martini is about 600 bucks. (Really should get it checked out by a competent gunsmith before entertaining any notions of firing it.) And then if you have got it checked out and have the go ahead to shoot it, you can get some nice fat .450/.577 ammunition to feed it.
Of course, then you'll need some accessories. They have a pretty nice bandolier to put all those cartridges into, and it is quite handsome at that. The other leather thing you'll need is a reproduction guard to go around the barrel to protect yourself from heat from repeated firing. Just like the real thing, which have all disappeared. Leather goods don't seem to last forever...
So then what do you do when the rifle breaks down. It is a machine after all and machines break sooner or later, although guns seem to last a lot longer than cars. IMA has you covered there too, they have plenty of parts. This will probably test your gunsmithing skills, but learning new things is always a good thing. Below is a trigger spring, striker spring, and a spare striker, too. Enjoy!
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Webley Flare and Riot gun for sale on Gunbroker, and only 10 hours to go, and looks to be sold. Built on a Webley Mk. IV chassis, it also includes a shoulder stock, which in itself is pretty desirable. It's not going cheap, but should be reasonable. Downsides: Federal Labs nickel plated everything. The hammers been cut (I hate it when they ruin a perfectly good Webley hammer, do they think they grow on trees?) Upsides: Did I mention a shoulder stock? Also has a pretty intricate gas round with folding fins. It'll sell today...
Update: This gun sold for $575.00