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#history #ww2 #documentary Discover the incredible story of the L42A1, the converted Lee-Enfield sniper rifle that the British Army used to dominate the Falklands War. Learn how this "obsolete" bolt-action relic outperformed modern semi-autos in the freezing South Atlantic. In June 1982, British paratroopers and Royal Marines faced dug-in Argentine forces on Mount Longdon and Goose Green. In their hands wasn't a modern semi-automatic, but a weapon with lineage dating back to the Victorian Age: the L42A1. In this video, we dive deep into the engineering, doctrine, and combat history of the last Lee-Enfield. We explore how the Royal Small Arms Factory converted the No.4 Mk I (T) .303 into a 7.62 NATO precision machine, and why British sniper doctrine preferred the bolt-action discipline over the rapid fire of the American M21 or Soviet Dragunov. Key Topics Covered: The transition from .303 British to 7.62 NATO. The engineering conversion of the L42A1. Combat analysis: Sgt Major Peter James Leach’s legendary shots at South Georgia. The Battle of Mount Longdon and Goose Green. Why the L42A1 was eventually replaced by the Accuracy International L96A1. Timestamps: 0:00 - The "Obsolete" Rifle in a Modern War 1:35 - The Ammo Crisis: .303 vs 7.62 NATO 3:10 - Engineering the L42A1: Converting the Lee-Enfield 4:55 - British Sniper Doctrine: Why Bolt Action? 6:40 - Combat History: The South Georgia Incident 8:15 - The Falklands: Goose Green & Mount Longdon 10:10 - The Limits of the L42A1 in Night Combat 11:50 - Legacy: From L42A1 to the L96A1 13:00 - Why the System Matters More Than the Gun #L42A1 #LeeEnfield #FalklandsWar #MilitaryHistory #SniperRifle #BritishArmy #ForgottenWeapons #RoyalMarines #ColdWarHistory