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Hey Jim,
The rifle in question has an external ten shot magazine just in front of the trigger guard. The P14 has a five shot internal capacity magazine like the '03. I have a U.S. Model 1917 Remington sittin' right behind me, it is a near exact copy of the P14 with the exception of being in .30-06 caliber and six shot internal mag. That's a Mark III, with whatever commercial scope the Brits could find or whatever.
Robert
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04-27-2009 01:41 AM
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Advisory Panel
P14 Sniper Rifles
Jim,
In "Sniping in
France
", Pritchard said the best combination they found was a P14 with a scope mounted over the bore, and is I remember correctly, his scope of choice was the A5. You can download "Sniping in France" for free, and if you need the web site, I can try to find it again. That obviously isn't an A5, but could the rifle be a P14?
Jim
According to Ian Skennerton
, the British
in WWI fitted Winchester P14 rifles with a special fine-adjustment rear sight for use as sniper rifles. Skennerton went on to add that the rifles were more accurate with iron sights than No. 1 Mark III's fitted with scopes.
J.B.
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Jim,
In "Sniping in
France
", Pritchard said the best combination they found was a P14 with a scope mounted over the bore, and is I remember correctly, his scope of choice was the A5. You can download "Sniping in France" for free, and if you need the web site, I can try to find it again. That obviously isn't an A5, but could the rifle be a P14?
Jim
Jim anotther tell tale is the chunky charger guide that gives the third rifle away as a No. 1 Mk 3.
The brits used a dozen or more separate commercial gunsmiths to mount scopes. Some did just a few - others did 100's. There is a good pic of a No1 Mk3 with an A5 in Skinnerton's sniper book. The scope is mounted well off to the left (not that they were all done that way).
Regards.
Jim
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Advisory Panel
According to
Ian Skennerton
, the
British
in WWI fitted Winchester P14 rifles with a special fine-adjustment rear sight for use as sniper rifles. Skennerton went on to add that the rifles were more accurate with iron sights than No. 1 Mark III's fitted with scopes.
J.B.
Prichard noted the same rifle (P14) and its iron sights (Appendix C in his book), but he much prefered scoped rifles, and he formed and ran the sniper schools. A lot of the sniping was indeed accomplished with iron sights,
but at long distances, I don't think any sniper would prefer iron sights. Comparative accuracy of the two rifles is of no surprise to me.
Jim
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