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Advisory Panel
I purchased a copy of this booklet about 15 years ago on a chance encounter at milarm in Edmonton. I think I may have paid $35 for it. Foolishly, I passed it on to someone else over the years. Reading this thread made me realize I needed a fresh copy. To my horror, the inflation on this book has become as incredible as anything else with the word sniper on it. Book sellers are commanding prices of around $300 for it, or worse. I finally found a copy from the UK
at a more reasonable price, but once the exchange rate is factored along with postage, it came to around $85.
I hope you do print up another run of them Peter, and put all the scalpers in their place.
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12-04-2014 07:49 AM
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Advisory Panel
How about going one better and having a revised and expanded e-book version for say, $20.? They'd sell like the proverbial hot cakes I suspect.
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same. 
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Legacy Member
It is a terrible terrible book.........it has cost me thousands upon thousands of dollars.
Each time I read it, and I read it often, I find that I am compelled to seek out and purchase even more to add to my meagre collection.
If it was not for that little book, I doubt that I would own:
2 No 4(T) rifles
A handful of No32 sights
A couple of scope tins
A useless little adjustment tool
The list goes on and on, typing it all here would mean admitting how much I have "collected."
I've even got a little brush for a L42a1 but no rifle. After reading the book I "needed" the brush. I'm sure if I read the evil little book again, i will need to buy the matching rifle.
So Peter please please ugently print a second volume, so that I can stop reading the very slightly evil first volume.
Paul
Last edited by paulseamus; 12-06-2014 at 08:09 PM.
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Thank You to paulseamus For This Useful Post:
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
paulseamus
It is a terrible terrible book.........it has cost me thousands upon thousands of dollars.
Each time I read it, and I read it often, I find that I am compelled to seek out and purchase even more to add to my meagre collection.
If it was not for that little book, I doubt that I would own:
2 No 4(T) rifles
A handful of No32 sights
A couple of scope tins
A useless little adjustment tool
The list goes on and on, typing it all here would mean admitting how much I have "collected."
I've even got a little brush for a L42a1 but no rifle. After reading the book I "needed" the brush. I'm sure if I read the evil little book again, i will need to buy the matching rifle.
So Peter please please ugently print a second volume, so that I can stop reading the very slightly evil first volume.
Paul

And I thought I was crook.
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Contributing Member
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Legacy Member
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Deceased January 15th, 2016

Originally Posted by
paulseamus
A useless little adjustment tool
I could not disagree more. The tool works and works well. It just (like so many other things) requires a little practice. Plus, as I nave noted before, a securely clamped rifle.
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Sorry to disagree Beery! From my limited experience with BOTH adjusting tools, I would simply ask, if they were both - even moderately successful, then why were they both declared obsolescent and replaced with the little tools illustrated in the back of the book? The only other tool that came close to it was the tool to remove the extractor plunger on the L1A1 rifle
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Deceased January 15th, 2016
The tool that I am referring to Peter is the cylindrical one with a central pin for holding the central screw steady while locking the outer ring. It's not easy to use but far from impossible and does get easier with practice.
BTW, I've PM'd you about an entirely different gun.
Last edited by Beerhunter; 12-08-2014 at 11:01 AM.
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Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
stencollector
I purchased a copy of this booklet about 15 years ago on a chance encounter at milarm in Edmonton. I think I may have paid $35 for it. Foolishly, I passed it on to someone else over the years. Reading this thread made me realize I needed a fresh copy. To my horror, the inflation on this book has become as incredible as anything else with the word sniper on it. Book sellers are commanding prices of around $300 for it, or worse. I finally found a copy from the UK at a more reasonable price, but once the exchange rate is factored along with postage, it came to around $85.
...snip...
I bought both of my "armourers perspective" copies at Milarm, the paperback copy which is full of oily fingerprints, and the hardbound copy I bought to replace it when the original was lent out and lost....luckily it found it's way back home eventually.
I got my copy of the "little scope booklet" from Pete Bloom....also lent out...no current idea as to whom, sadly not returned, and not yet replaced.
The mark of a good book is what percentage of the pages are oil smudged from comparing a physical example to the paper example....I've started to believe that one should purchase 2 copies of books which will be used in such circumstances...
speaking of book price "inflation", has anyone (other than myself) attempted to source a replacement copy of "The British
Sniper"? Obviously I should have simply purchased 20-30 copies back in the 90s and just sat on them until now...I could probably pay off my mortgage with the procedes.
Last edited by Lee Enfield; 12-08-2014 at 04:15 PM.
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