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M1917 Rear Sight
The rear sight on this 1917 barreled action has a notch that prevents the slide from going fully up the ladder.
I've never seen this before and was wondering the reason for this.
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05-18-2017 09:28 AM
# ADS
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Welcome to the forum, you'd have to ask the person that added that I think. Someone's personal idea.
Hard to see too. You should have used a more neutral back ground to take your pic...light behind you...
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Last edited by us019255; 05-18-2017 at 11:04 AM.
Ed reluctantly no longer in the Bitterroot
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Thank you for brightening the image. I will post better photos. The notch is attached to or part of the ladder.
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Outdated German legal restriction
I have, unfortunately, seen all too many backsights like this in Germany
. A couple of decades ago, some bureaucratic geniuses with the all-too-common detachment from reality of those who formulate gun control laws, created the "Kriegswaffenkontrollgesetz". One of the requirements was that bayonet bosses had to be removed and sights had to be limited to a maximum range of 300 meters. 
Maybe the unsung heroes who though this up imagined that there would otherwise be armies of loonies taking potshots at, say, 1500 yards, and then charging the rest of the way with fixed bayonets. This led to large numbers of Lee Enfields and Garands with ground-off bayonet bosses



(which, on a MK4, means that the barrel is FUBARed for collectors). And sights limited by a welding spot. Garands were also limited to take only 5-round clips. These idiotic requirements have now been deleted.
So the gun is perhaps an import from Germany. Either buy a new backsight or (my tightwad solution) spend a creative evening with a diamond file and file the blasted thing off! Fortunately, it appears that many gunsmiths didn't like spoiling the weapons either, so the spot is often made so that a fully functioning sight can be recovered.
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Originally Posted by
Patrick Chadwick
seen all too many backsights like this in
Germany
I forgot about those restrictions. We don't see too many here...
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New leaf sights are very common in the USA
. Good luck.
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And I say keep it!
You can get another ladder if you want, its a piece of history and something that few have.
Worth hanging onto.
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Originally Posted by
Patrick Chadwick
One of the requirements was that bayonet bosses had to be removed
Did they apply this regulation to deactivated weapons, remove bayonet bosses, in Germany
? Because logically if someone intended to "misbehave" with a bayonet it is immaterial whether or not it is attached to a deac, surely?
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As I tell my wife, don't try to interject logic into it.