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No. 32 Scope Reproduction attempt
I am planning on attempting this but not sure how well it will go. Does anyone have very detailed pictures and drawings of the No. 32 scope? Also a list of materials and metals that were used to make one. I will be making the scope as a complete dummy one. It will not function as a scope in anyway. I will attempt to make the adjustment knobs move and turn but once again they will not function. I will update everyone on my progress along the way. Also depending on the time and cost I will most likely attempt to sell a few after the first is made. Has anyone ever tried this before or think this idea would work?
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03-06-2010 10:39 AM
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Peter Laidler
has written some very informative articles that are resident on this site. Search for " Phoenix Rising from the Ashes" Part 1&2. Don't know if he's got Part 3 ready however we're all looking forward to it. Good luck with your project. Ron
Last edited by rgg_7; 03-06-2010 at 05:36 PM.
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I'm not sure if this is exactly what you're looking for, but there's an entry in the England Section (click here) of the MKL
(Milsurp Knowledge Library
), showing the dimensions of the No.32 scope, including the measurements of the cross wires etc.
(Click PIC to Enlarge)
1952 Instructional Pamphlet for No.4 Mk1(T) sniper rifle (click here)
Note: After you click on images to ENLARGE them, you may find they automatically size smaller in your browser's window making them harder to view. The auto sizing is your browser's way of keeping images entirely within the screen size you have set. Move your mouse pointer to the bottom centre of the pic and you will see an options panel appear. There will be a small square box next to the large X, which will have a pointer arrow sticking out of it. If it's illuminated, it means the pic you're viewing can be enlarged, so click on this box and the pic will EXPAND and open to its normal size.
Also, as mentioned by rgg_7, Peter Laidler
has published a two part article series on how to rebuild a totally unserviceable scrap No.32 telescope, which you also may find helpful ... 
"Phoenix Rising from the Ashes" - Part 1 (click here)
"Phoenix Rising from the Ashes" - Part 2 (click here)
Finally, with thanks to member mudpuppy, check the article titled Mechanical Blueprints and Specifications for the Enfield No.4 Mk1(T) Sniper Rifle (click here) in the Technical Articles for Milsurp Collectors and Re-loaders (click here).
Regards,
Badger
Last edited by Badger; 03-06-2010 at 06:49 PM.
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Thank You to Badger For This Useful Post:
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I got a copy of "Telescope Sighting No32" by Peter Laidler
from ds-solutions.co.uk
good book, it helped me machine a mount for my No32 mk1
Andy.
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Badger....thanks for posting the links. This site has some great reference material.
Peter....any update on Part3 "Phoenix Rising from the Ashes"
Joseph_85...You could take a No42 or 53 scope tube and modify for your project. A chap in NZ
had Israeli ones for sale...they were complete and in very good condition.
Ron
Last edited by rgg_7; 03-06-2010 at 07:01 PM.
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If No53 scopes are still reasonably priced ( I paid £25 a few years ago for one with light damage ) then it would be much better than starting from scratch.
The square block which houses the adjusting mechanism looks like it started life as a casting from the No32's I have had a chance to examine, I don't know how accurate a replica the original poster wants to make, but there is that to take into account. It's rather more complex in shape than it first seems from photographs.
My plan for the functioning replica was to transplant parts from a Russian
PSO scope - the siderail type intended for AK variants. They have a FFP moving graticle system like the No32 and a similar method of zeroing the range and windage scales. But then at the time I had access to PSO's for next to nothing, so it wasn't a big deal to break one up just to get the parts I needed. The PSO grat itself is unusable - it's nice, but hardly authentic.
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The Mk3 MUST be the easiest option. Using N053 tubes would make it a bit of a doddle.......... (DODDLE: Armourers technical term for 'pretty simple')
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Thank you so much for everything so far information wise. The reproductions I am planning on making will not be any type of optic. The will just be a plain tube. I have access to a full machine shop that I restore military vehicles at. so actually building the scope will not be that hard once started and get all the machines set up. I am WW2 Re-enactor and my impression is a RCEME (Royal Canadian
Electrical Mechanical Engineer) I do a weapons display that has basic styles of SMLE and Light Machine guns. the armors display I have I have been told is quite impressive for common wealth stuff. The only SMLE I am missing right now the T. Just being a display is why I am creating a non-functioning scope. I would love to have a functional one but right now it just isn't possible. I know this will be a very hard task but the outcome would be great. dont think i have the know how to make one function either. Thank you so much for the information so far once again.
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Originally Posted by
Joseph_85
Thank you so much for the information so far once again.
You're welcome .... 
Something else I forgot to mention, which may really help you if you started this project, would be to obtain a couple of excellent technical books on the No.32 scopes written by Peter Laidler
.
In addition to being a trained and highly experienced military "Armourer", he has authored two excellent books about the No.4(T) sniper rifles and their No.32 scopes. They are titled "An Armourer's Perspective: .303 No.4(T) Sniper Rifle", which he co-authored with Ian Skennerton
and his own dedicated work, "Telescope Sighting No.32".
If you're really interested in some in-depth learning about the No.4(T) sniper rifles and the No.32 series of scopes, their history, evolution, repair and adjustments for shooting, we'd highly recommend those two books, which are pictured below.
(Click PIC to Enlarge)
Last edited by Badger; 03-07-2010 at 09:05 AM.
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