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04-13-2010 12:36 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
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It's your lucky day............... Contact surpmil on this site. He has JUST what you are looking for
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The Following 4 Members Say Thank You to Peter Laidler For This Useful Post:
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What Peter said contact surpmil.
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The Following 4 Members Say Thank You to MJ1 For This Useful Post:
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I bought one of surpmil's IWS mounts a few months ago.
great bloke and an excellent scope mount.
Great investment,
Tikka T3 Tac. Enfields No1mk3*, No4mk1 T, No4mk1*T, M.H. 577/450s. K31. MAS 36s. Mausers G98s, 1908, M48, BSA 222 (Mauser action) .22 match arms. black powder. 1873 11mm. Webley 455 MKI.MKIVs,MKVI. Spanish .44,10.35s,OP 455s
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Thank You to read6737 For This Useful Post:
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Advisory Panel
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In Thanks
Gents, I am a total newbie to this site, but your advice and assistance does you proud. Many Thanks.
Deano.
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I received this one around 1998

1999
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Mr Mj1,
How does the big scope shoot on the l42 ? I'd be very interested to know Sir?
FC
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It doesn't help groups a lot, but it's good for picking up targets in poor light/ woodsy areas. I've run 20x scopes on L42s, but groups didn't shrink much. They were EASIER to shoot. The glass in No.32/L1a1 scopes is very good- seing bullet holes on a white background is easy at 100yds- do-able in bright sunlight at 200yds. Its just that the reticle tops aren't very uniform (or pointy) making paper punching a bit more challenging. (I sometimes just place the intersection of the post and crosswire tangent to the round bull for grouping purposes- POI isn't as relevant for this exercise.)
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I think you'd be better off using a completely different weapon for stalking deer.
The heavy-barrel Enfields are not ideal for snap or multi-position shooting. The barrel weight makes them slow to swing onto aim, and tiring over multiple aims (they are very awkward to use in military matchs, such as the UK
Civilian Methuen competition).
They are also not the right ergonomic shape to use with a large scope on high mounts - even with a cheekpiece its hard to get sufficient head elevation. When you do, you have quite a potential for introducing an arcing sight error due to the vertical distance of the tube above the bore line. Far better to use a low-mounted scope - eg a Simmons Whitetail classic with a 1" straight tube - in the original No32 mount.
You also ought to bear in mind the potential damage to your very valuable rifle by having a large scope/mount combination stressing the pads & screws of the mounting.
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Thank You to Thunderbox For This Useful Post: