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Early No.4 Target Foresight Covers/Shields
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Thank You to Strangely Brown For This Useful Post:
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11-14-2016 12:03 PM
# ADS
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What's the second one, then? It appears to sit in the protector much higher than the first, so high in fact, that it seems unlikely this is merely a sunshade.
There's a sight element inside?
Excuse my ignorance, but there isn't much of the .303 range rifle thing going on around here.
You may recall I had to improvise mine.

-----krinko
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Legacy Member
John Wilkes Precision
Hello Strangely,
Here's one made by John Wilkes Precision, although I have no idea where or when. Can anyone shed any light?
Cheers!
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Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
krinko
What's the second one, then? It appears to sit in the protector much higher than the first, so high in fact, that it seems unlikely this is merely a sunshade.
There's a sight element inside?
-----krinko
No sight element in this one, it would appear to be (I think) experimental and done by an individual shooter. My best guess would be during the late 1960's and early 1970's which was very much a transitional period of target shooting.
IIRC and I need to research this, the NRA at one stage governed the length of foresight tubes?
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Originally Posted by
Bundook303
Hello Strangely,
Here's one made by John Wilkes Precision, although I have no idea where or when. Can anyone shed any light?
Cheers!
Nearly all the Whitaker Specials I have seen sport a foresight tube by Wilkes. That would date them to the early 1970's.
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It would be an unusual Wilkes, most I have seen are not canted like that to fit in the .303 canted block.
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