When I try to paste an URL pointing to a downloadable file, directly into the browser address, it doesn't show anything on the network tab.
However, I've found a workaround that suits my use case. Create an .html file anywhere, and just create a link to that attachment (an alternative is to just open about:blank
in the browser and edit the HTML in place).
<a href="https://example.com/example.ambiguous.file">download</a>
Then open that .html file and click on the link.
This causes the network tab to display the file you're trying to download, and so the headers.
In my case I was able to troubleshoot how the Content-Disposition
headers was never sent to specific browsers.
EDIT (2017-11):
If this doesn't work with recent versions of Chrome, try putting it in an image tag. The objective is to sniff the HTTP response headers, not the content.
<img src="https://example.com/example.ambiguous.file">download</img>