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A bit round the houses Rob but are you seriously disputing that an overseer was sent from H&H to get LB sniper production onto a full production line basis? And how does it grow with the telling? It is a H&H fact. I don't recall any mention of nail filing or hairdressing either.
And let's stick to the main protagonists too. Ainley, Jolly, Aldis, Ackland, Zeiss, Chanmce Bros are simply red herrings. H&H became the masters that got No4T conversion down to a fine art/production line basis and it was they who were selected to do the same at LB -. It's nothing to do with making rifles or hairdressing. It's procution lining and upping output.
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03-04-2015 06:43 AM
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No, I guess he came alright, but I'm definitely disputing any suggestion that they were engaged in some sort of lackadaisical, go-slow type scenario. They were busy as ----- and they had their thinking caps on the whole time, that is obvious from the products and refinements of products they came up with.
So what this bloke got up to, I don't know; can you tell us how long he was over here, what he actually did and where, and whether there is any record of the same other than his own statements?
Is there anything to show a sudden increase in production? Was there some technical issue he solved? Was quality somehow improved?
I'm not sure the London gunmakers were so clever when it came to telescopic sights anyway; they generally avoided them,and as I've pointed out in the past, Purdey's for example got the recoil forces backwards when they designed their Aldis mounts in WWI! The whole subject was almost entirely neglected between the wars, but for the Ainley rifle, which along with all the flaws mentioned previously was a bad idea tactically, since to have a readily identifiable report peculiar to a sniper's rifle is a fine way of shortening the lives of your snipers.
It's pretty clear they weren't short of brain power at Long Branch and fitting pads to a No4 action is not a terribly taxing task. I dare say if they felt in need of some guidance there were any number of qualified people on this side who could help - Griffin & Howe for a start.
We all know the No32 scope was designed for the Bren and it and it's bracket were massively heavy, presumably to take the shock of automatic fire. Sticking it on the No4 rifle was an expedient "it'll do, use what's on the shelf" maneuver of the kind we know so well.
The pads were not up to the forces imposed by the overly-heavy scope and mount, and fitting them was much more labour intensive than it needed to be. The rear pad has no positive resistance to recoil forces except friction and almost all the load is on that little front spigot, hence the shearing off of same and loosening of the pads you have told us about in the past. A design with two large spigots and matching recesses would have been far better from that point of view.
The whole setup is now hallowed by time and history, but that doesn't obviate the design flaws.
SAL considered the No32 a poor design and got busy producing something better, the C67, same as they did with the Telescope, Observing, Snipers, the Stand, Instrument, C-No.47 to replace those mid-Victorian Telescopes, GS, Signallers, Scout, Regiment and those little wooden tripods etc.. etc. Not to mention the Monte Carlo stocks, 5x scope etc. etc.
Either they learned an awful lot awfully quickly or they didn't need much help fitting a No32 to a No.4!
That none of those improvements were adopted, and indeed that various shabby little dodges were resorted to to avoid adopting any of them, I'm afraid just goes to show that while copying Czech
light machine guns or Supermarine copying the He70 was all very well, adopting "colonial" technology was apparently too much of a pill to swallow.
Last edited by Surpmil; 03-07-2015 at 03:18 AM.
Reason: typo
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Much changes, much remains the same. 
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The Thompson was a gangsters gun ( Churchill) but the STEN production was incredible when adopted. The Owen made the grade with the Aussies not the Sten or Austen which both came in behind the Thompson in the choice line up. The COLONIAL COMMENT IS VERY TRUE.
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According to Sid Harvey, and of my memory speaking to him, he was suddenly shipped off secretly mid war, so presumably late 42/earlly 43 I'm guessing. The workforce only knew he had gone to |Canada
to after his close friends at work were informed by his family. I would imagine that the managers knew but kept it secret. He came back at the end of the war and it was he that told that his job was to get output up and streamlined as they had done/were doing at H&H. Can't be any more accurate than that date wise but continued at H&H until he retired in 1955. Sid Harvey is/was the last of the wartime employers left and has since died.
So we'll agree to differ. I say that he did exactly what he said he did and you say that he was there for some other reason, such as a holiday for good war work....
I appreciate that most of the stuff we make and send our troops to war with is crap and inferior to anything else made elsewhere, including the Owen et-al (Bindi/Cinders, I used both Sten and Owen - and the Sterling). But it's always worth reiterating to those who ain't been there or been in the system, that you go to war with what you've got, not what you want. What you NEED comes later.
But guess what..... The last Sten guns left service slightly AFTER the Owen guns (1968-9 Owen and 1972 Sten) and the really crap, utterly useless No32 scope's in 1988. As for the Tele Scxt Reg, they were still in FRONT LINE SERVICE in 2000. Now what does that say?
And after all the slagging off............, crap kit, better stuff from the colonies, yep.........., worth remembering that while it took a LONG time and a LOT of help, we prevailed with what we had. And we didn't finish paying off our debt until 1998 or so
That is as diplomatic as I can be. If anyone wants to read my first, not so carefully worded reply can PM me
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Nice piece here on the aircraft and its long journey to the UK
via Iceland:
B-17 41-24386 QUEEN BEE-17
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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Last edited by Seaspriter; 03-06-2015 at 09:23 AM.
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Sid Harvey and others like him must have had their work cut out for them nevertheless. The pressure was on to deliver, and deliver they did consistantly, as we all know from those who hold a rifle that passed threw their magical hands.
Yes it may have been repetitive, but thats exactly when the professional engineer comes out in those blessed with this art.
Thank God we had them delivering such fine examples through H&H to the those trained in the art of using them, and I am sure helped to shorten the war in its small way!!
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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Bob,
Good piece there on the fuze. Must have taken a while to piece both sides capabilities in WW2 together to reach the findings?
'Tonight my men and I have been through hell and back again, but the look on your faces when we let you out of the hall - we'd do it all again tomorrow.' Major Chris Keeble's words to Goose Green villagers on 29th May 1982 - 2 PARA
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