Unertl 8x
Of “low rider” adaptions to vintage cars or “Boom, Boom & Wrap as something yet to be labelled “music”.
Pure and unadulterated ‘side eject’ without ad man marketing ‘angle’! The fairness-mandated self-disclosure of ‘non-hunter’, biased perspective here.Īlso analogous of wider pesonal views. Both as scope top & centered design, factory holes accommodating. Perhaps too even ‘gently modified’ as yet vintage shooters! Such not including optics ‘grafted on’ effect!Ĭonsider nice Marlin levers early fifties forward Models 336 or early seventies forward revised 1895. Buy Winchester levers for wonderful, historic classic-classy ‘hole free’ aesthetics of original/vintage equivalent sight applications. Noting fundamentally contradictory manifestations of shooter versus collector aesthetics rifle! I too, agree with all the sage views reflected here, but most directly as succinctly according to Clarence’s Post #3. We have a small ranch and I want to carry it in my truck and use it to shoot hogs and varmints that I encounter while at the ranch. What is the best way to deal with these holes? I know they make screw plugs but I was thinking something more permanent like possibly welding them up and then cerakoting the rifle? Seems almost sacrilege to do this to a pre 64 but with the holes drilled it isn’t really pristine anymore right? I want to make this rifle my go to gun. I assume these kill any collector value of it but I don’t really care I bought this thing to use.
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Unertl 8x free#
Anyway it has a weaver side mount scope on it with four holes drilled in the side of the receiver. Malcolm 8X USMC Sniper Riflescope (Vietnam-Era Unertl Reproduction) -5 599.99 575.00 A Faithful Reproduction Of The Renowned Vietnam War-Era Unertl Sniper Scope Includes Pre-Installed Lyman-Style Mounts & Recoil Spring Free U.S. I don’t really don’t know much about them. I found a rifle for sale that seems virtually identical to mom’s rifle and I bought it. The rifle is in great shape and I have it but it is so sentimental to me I don’t want to use / abuse it. She may have bought it new but I don’t know for sure both her and dad have passed away but I know she had it in the 60s. I know she killed several elk with the rifle. She and my dad hunted together in Colorado where they lived before I was born. I shot my first deer back in the early 1980s with a model 94 32 Winchester special. I just found this website and what a great resource it seems to be. The notes further state the S/N as falling into a range assigned to the Philadelphia Armory during WWII, and that the consignor acquired the weapon from the Major's widow.Hello. Notes supplied by the consignor attribute the rifle as a former USMC 1903A1 1941 Sniper that was retained as private property by a retiring USMC Major (unnamed), and sporterized for his personal use. The stock is fine smooth hardwood in a Monte Carlo pattern, with black plastic forearm tip and grip cap with white spacers, raised cheekpiece, brown leather sling and a Bishop-brand checkered buttplate. A set of scope blocks are installed on the barrel and receiver, carrying a scarce Unertl USMC-Sniper 8x scope, which is numbered "1752" with a set of metal lens covers.
The rear 5 inches of the barrel, receiver, trigger guard and floorplate show fine scroll engraving with dot backgrounds, with the trigger guard also initialed "J/F/P" and "MARIE" on the floorplate. Redfield hooded ramp blade front and peep rear sights, with no visible markings on the barrel. Manufactured in 1938, this Springfield 1903 rifle has been reconfigured into a fine sporting rifle.