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Scout regiment telescope
What is a scout regiment telescope with clear optics, correct operation and good leather selling for these days? The one marked as above not the signaler model.
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05-30-2011 10:04 PM
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Legacy Member
telescope costs
Hi Viking guy
"How much" really depends on "How Lucky", I have seen them ranging from £300 downwards on a popular auction site, but I am sure you may be able to pick one up at the lower end of the scale in reasonable condition if you stick at the search and bide your time for the gem at the bargin price. Luck plays a part, but looking a little further than military collectors circle can yield the right result.
I recently picked an example up for £80, a little beaten up, needing a bit of TLC, but have managed to free up all the moving parts, resoldering the draw glands where necessary, just needs a new OG lens group which has a crack in the inner lens. Good enough to complete a CES for an L42 or No.4T, but prehaps not one to take on the next sniping mission!
Good luck with your search!
Bushcreature
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Contributing Member
At the Phoenix show last weekend there were several for sale - £350 would have been a typical price.
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Which of the two object lenses are you short of Bushy. There are two. The inner is a double convex while the outer has a matching concave
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OG Lens Damage
Hi Peter,
Pretty sure it the inner one, the double convex, though I can't be to 100% sure at the moment. It is proving a swine to get apart. It has had a hard knock in its former life and the sun shade was jammed in the rear position. This I have been able to gently free so it extends to the forward position. The OG lens group is a different story! Stuck fast, a situation no doubt you have encountered more than a few times in your career. I now have red welts where I have tried to unscrew it with a pad of rubber in the palm of the hand for a little extra grip.
Looking more closely I can see both rims of the lens have damage to the outer edges, and they are making some crunching sounds as I attempt to unscrew it. Ehhh!
Any idea's on how to get it apart?
a "Vexed" Bushy
Ps. The OG lens housing is not sitting flush against the tube body so I'm guessing that it has either been screwed in on the "p**s" or been pushed there by the damaging blow.
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Originally Posted by
viking guy
What is a scout regiment telescope with clear optics, correct operation and good leather selling for these days? The one marked as above not the signaler model.
It would help if you completed the details on the 'left hand side' showing where you are - prices will vary around the world
Mine are not the best, but they are not too bad. I can think of lots of Enfields I'd rather have but instead of constantly striving for more, sometimes it's good to be satisfied with what one has...
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The Following 2 Members Say Thank You to Alan de Enfield For This Useful Post:
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Originally Posted by
Alan de Enfield
It would help if you completed the details on the 'left hand side' showing where you are - prices will vary around the world
Click on the little blue dot on the bottom left of his post "box" to see his location. (Unless, like me, you have to use "mobile" during the week- which shows NO bonus info!)
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The OG lens housing is cross threaded into the main housing after it was dropped. Common problem and you've just got to persevere. But a tip would be to knock the OTHER side down to UNcross the thread.
So common was this problem that during the early 70's there was a suggestion by Tony Bowman that a 1/2" ring of anodized alloy ought to be slipped down around the front body, behind the front shade. THis would prevent the shade from going fully to the rear. As such, because the shade would now always be 1/2" proud of the vulnerable OG lens assembly, it would act as a the proverbial sacrificial lamb when the cack handed clowns in the watch towers dropped them. If youi drop one, it will ALWAYS land OG lens first!
There another useless bit of Lee Enfield knowledge collected from the memory banks
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Legacy Member
Scout "Pearls"
The adage "Old Dog New Tricks" couldn't be further from the truth in this case, a couple of blows from a rubber mallet it slipped back in line and unscrewed with the greatest of ease. Glad to see that the bigger hammer approach works as well in the delicate world of optics, as in that of heavy engineering. That Drink I owe you is now a double! Keep the pearls of wisdom coming. I have included a couple of pictures of the offending item, the concave lens has taken the full brunt of the blow and is cleaved clean in two with a fair portion of the rim broken away also, the convex lens is still in one piece and amazingly undamaged.
I was suprised that the doublet was not cemented together as in the No32, is this the norm ?
Hopefully this Gem will prove useful to the other members of the forum, who find themselves in the same predicament.
Lastly as a man in the know, do you know where I might find a spare lens?
Very many Thanks Peter
Bacon saved!!
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