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12-03-2018 01:50 PM
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They didn't all have No32 on them so the shape is the characteristic in my mind. You do what you can afford and then if you have Brian do it, it'll shoot correctly too. Then you have a shooter that isn't blowing brass and will achieve group at decent ranges. And...didn't cost you a second mortgage.
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They didn't all have No32 on them so the shape is the characteristic in my mind. You do what you can afford and then if you have Brian do it, it'll shoot correctly too. Then you have a shooter that isn't blowing brass and will achieve group at decent ranges. And...didn't cost you a second mortgage.
wazz built one up we done all the work our selves the hardest part was drilling the hole at the back of the action he done every thing that peter said in his post
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amadeus: I just had a great trip to the range with my replica (fake) T with repro Taiwanese scope. It certainly looks the part and you don't run into many at the range who even know what a "T" is let alone care about authenticity. I've only put a few hundred rounds through it with this scope and it works well. If it breaks I won't lose any sleep given the cost plus I also have a Weaver that can replace it for shooting purposes. In addition, I do have a pair of real T's with real scopes (each one worked on by one of the two extant experts in the field) and, while I do shoot both, I'd rather keep those two real scopes in the condition they are in- they both had hard lives. Come to think of it, I might swap the repro into the bracket for range trips with the real T's. Back to the OP- I would recommend buying a repro for display and occasional use while using the Weaver for most of the shooting.
Ridolpho
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Or, better still Amadeus, get yourself a good Mk1 or Mk1/2 rifle and an 'original' repro bracket from our very own Roger Payne
. Plus a set of his body pads. Then get someone like Brian at BDL
to set the rifle up USING A COLLIMATED AND CENTRALISED slave No32 telescope. With me so far? Then he can fit the wood properly, bead blast, phosphate and paint. Now you'll have a No4T less the telescope. Then, when you finally get a telescope, you'll have a rifle with a perfectly mated and matched and collimated bracket ready for you to drop the telescope into.
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Or, better still Amadeus, get yourself a good Mk1 or Mk1/2 rifle and an 'original' repro bracket from our very own
Roger Payne
. Plus a set of his body pads. Then get someone like Brian at
BDL
to set the rifle up USING A COLLIMATED AND CENTRALISED slave No32 telescope. With me so far? Then he can fit the wood properly, bead blast, phosphate and paint. Now you'll have a No4T less the telescope. Then, when you finally get a telescope, you'll have a rifle with a perfectly mated and matched and collimated bracket ready for you to drop the telescope into.
Well... Yea. That’s actually what the plan was until I ran into the conundrum of not having a good repro No32 scope. Now I’m trying to figure out if it makes more sense to stick with the original plan and use the K3 or just get the barreled receiver set up right and slap a no-gunsmith mount on it and call it good?
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Attachment 97561Attachment 97562

Originally Posted by
amadeus76
Well... Yea. That’s actually what the plan was until I ran into the conundrum of not having a good repro No32 scope. Now I’m trying to figure out if it makes more sense to stick with the original plan and use the K3 or just get the barreled receiver set up right and slap a no-gunsmith mount on it and call it good?
amadeus: But will it look this good? My repro is fun and shoots well ('42 Savage with as new bore) BUT the pads were installed by a complete incompetent (no, not me!). If you were to have one set up by BDL
it could be a fantastic rifle and you can change out scopes over time, perhaps locating an original someday. The very best groups I've shot with mine were actually with the Weaver but it's not horrible with the repro thing. You get what you pay for and I bought this repro No. 32 for about $400 (US).
Ridolpho
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Here are pics of my No4 Mk2 (a POF
rifle), I regularly set it up like this and can revert to std No4 configuration in a few minutes. Spare NOS Morris butt stock, original No4T cheekpiece, Fulton steel mount and a Weaver K3 with post and crosshair reticule. Looks good, shoots great and the rifle is unaltered!
Attachment 97563Attachment 97564Attachment 97565
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Originally Posted by
Patt14 No2
Looks good, shoots great and the rifle is unaltered!
That's the sort of thing I was referring to...
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Originally Posted by
Ridolpho
Attachment 97561Attachment 97562
amadeus: But will it look this good? My repro is fun and shoots well ('42 Savage with as new bore) BUT the pads were installed by a complete incompetent (no, not me!). If you were to have one set up by
BDL
it could be a fantastic rifle and you can change out scopes over time, perhaps locating an original someday.
That’s what o keep coming back to...

Originally Posted by
Patt14 No2
Here are pics of my No4 Mk2 (a
POF
rifle), I regularly set it up like this and can revert to std No4 configuration in a few minutes. Spare NOS Morris butt stock, original No4T cheekpiece, Fulton steel mount and a Weaver K3 with post and crosshair reticule. Looks good, shoots great and the rifle is unaltered!
Attachment 97563Attachment 97564Attachment 97565
That’s essentially how I have my Mk2 set up currently, minus the cheek rest, and what I might do with the receiver if I don’t do the faux-(T).
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