1. The British headspace requirements for the No.1 and No.4 Enfield rifle are .064 minimum and .074 maximum. The problem with the Enfield rifle is "NOT" headspace, the problem is Lake City does not make cases for the .303 British. Meaning the SAAMI standards for chamber dimensions, case dimensions do not apply to military rifles.
2. The No.1 Enfield rifle was inspected four times a year by the unit armourers and if the rifle failed the .074 headspace gauge the armourer fitted a new bolt head.
3. The No.4 Enfield rifle did not solve fixing headspace issues because the bolt head still required proper fitting by the unit armourer. Meaning you just didn't screw on a new longer bolt head and call it done.
4. Bolt head timing was a requirement when fitting a new bolt head, meaning the rear of the bolt head was to contact the collar on the firing pin at the approximate 3:00 position and not over rotate the 12:00 position. This affected the amount the cocking piece is pushed to the rear and also affected trigger pull.
The British military experimented with No.4 and No.5 bolt heads, BUT it was found that by the time anything over a No.3 bolt head was needed the surface hardening of the receiver had been worn through and the receiver needed to be replaced. (It had nothing to do with replacing the barrel) The bolt heads were numbered 0 through 3 and each numbered bolt head was approximately .003 longer than the next size bolt head. This means the receiver lug recesses would have .012 wear and the receiver would be replaced.
And since you can no longer find No.3 bolt heads that do not cost a arm and a leg, and at the maximum headspace of .074 you can have over .016 head clearance the rubber o-rings come in very handy.
Anytime you want to maintain and shoot a accurate Enfield rifle Boyd Allen just ask me, I have all the manuals and spent hours talking to Enfield armourers.
Now go ahead Boyd Allen and tell me a accurate Enfield rifle isn't a accurate shooter and doesent belong at Accurateshooter.com.