-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
WWl Sniper with 1903 and ID of sniper.
Information
|
Warning: This is a relatively older thread This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current. |
|
-
07-15-2009 09:38 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
The suit is a great idea. But given the equipment available to snipers in the German
army and to a lesser degree the British
army, the practical effectiveness of that iron sighted 03 is at best limited. One has to wonder just what was the U.S. Army thinking to give men what amounted to no more than an infantry rifle and expect that they were going to be effective snipers. Maybe it was just a case of the Army catching up with on the ground reality. JMHO. Sincerely. BruceV.
-
-
Advisory Panel
42nd Division Snipers
*********************************
"Me. All the rest are deados!"
67th Company, 5th Marines 1st Sgt. Daniel "Pop" Hunter's response to 1st Lt. Jonas Platt's query "Who is your Commander"?, Torcy side of Hill 142, Belleau Wood, 8:00 am, 6 Jun 1918.
Semper Fidelis!

-
The Following 4 Members Say Thank You to Jim Tarleton For This Useful Post:
-
Advisory Panel
I note with interest that the sniper appears to be wearing a doughboy helmet with chin strap underneath all that netting.
J.B.
-
-
Banned
Various types of iron sights were used in the sniping role well into WW1, in WW2 they'd have been considered "Sharpshooters" rather than Snipers.
The US had telescope sighted rifles available, including periscope sighted rifles with an unfolding pantograph stock that allowed the sniper to take dead aim while his head was below the level of the trench ramparts.
I've read that the vast majority of Japanese
"sniper fire" in the Pacific theatre was actually from designated marksmen, chosen more for expendability than talent.
Any wound from by rifle fire from 200 yards away or more was automatically put down to snipers.
Not that the Japanese didn't also have many well equiped and well trained snipers, they certainly did.
PS
Most sniper training was with the standard iron sighted infantry rifle. According to Hesketh-Pritchard in "Sniping in France
" the telescoped rifles had an accuracy life of as little as 500 rounds with most losing their edge for long range work after 600 to 1000 rounds due to erosion from the rather primitive propellants and Cupro-Nickel jacketed bullets in use then. Telescoped rifles were to be fired only the few shots necessary to sight them in before going into combat, with no shots wasted for other training purposes.
Last edited by Alfred; 07-16-2009 at 12:36 AM.
-
Could be a rifle set up for the Warner-Swayze(spelling?) scope, but w/ the scope removed. From the side the attaching rail won't show. Removal of the scope did often present return to zero problems!
-
-
Legacy Member
iron sighted snipers
WW1 - Billy Sing (Australia
) used an iron sighted Lee Enfield on Gallipoli for a total of over 100 "kills".
WW2 - Simo Hayha (Finland) used an iron sighted Finnish
M27 for a total of over 500 "kills".
-
-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Alfred
I've read that the vast majority of
Japanese
"sniper fire" in the Pacific theatre was actually from designated marksmen, chosen more for expendability than talent.
Any wound from by rifle fire from 200 yards away or more was automatically put down to snipers.
Not that the Japanese didn't also have many well equiped and well trained snipers, they certainly did.
In his Pacific War memoir, "Goodbye, Darkness", noted author and former Marine William Manchester describes a duel he had with a Japanese marksman on Okinawa. Both men had iron-sighted rifles, Manchester's being a borrowed M-1. It's a short but highly recommended read, penned in the late 1970's I believe.
-
-
Advisory Panel
Artillery
*********************************
"Me. All the rest are deados!"
67th Company, 5th Marines 1st Sgt. Daniel "Pop" Hunter's response to 1st Lt. Jonas Platt's query "Who is your Commander"?, Torcy side of Hill 142, Belleau Wood, 8:00 am, 6 Jun 1918.
Semper Fidelis!

-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
I knew the early smokeless propellants were highly erosive to the throat of rifle barrels. But 600 or even 1,000 rounds is not a lot of shooting. And snipers are not known to do a lot of rapid fire. So if firing was limited to only necessary targeting and then actual combat, one has to wonder just how hot the breech and throat of a sniper rifle would have gotten in actual use. One has to wonder if the cause was erosion of the throat or simply the build up of cupro-nickle fouling, which I also understand was known to severely degrade accuracy. Sincerely. BruceV.