Hey, first time posting here.
A few years back I somehow ended up being the owner of a CF old sniper rifle. I swapped the peep sight system for a Millet scope (didn't know about Vortex at the time) and got to long range shooting.
Long story short, I think I have on my hands a one of a kind/pretty rare piece of kit as I am unable to find any for sale anywhere.
It came from the sniper vault of the R22R when a certain Sgt retired and got to pick one as a parting gift (so is the story I've been told) and then he passed it on to a collector which ended up selling it to me.
So, I just wanna poke around the forums to see if anyone ever got close to one of those, got information and what not, I'd like to know more about it!
Caliber is .308/7.62x51
It's a Parker Hale C3 (not the civilian version)
The barrel is floating and on the heavy side of things with a very nice hammered finish all over
The stock has an integretad cheek riser carved in and has a thick clear coat
The stock mag well isn't dug out so it's 1 bullet at a time but the mag well plate has a cover on the bottom of it bolted in.
Here's a picture
I'd also like to know how much it's really worth (the peep sight I've seen labeled as "rare" and going for a few 100s)
Cheers!
What's the washer for between barrel and receiver?
What's the washer for between barrel and receiver?
The barrel was probably taken from something else, so the washer is there is make up the difference between the shoulder on the barrel and that of the receiver.
M1917 done up as a target rifle with an Enfield manufactured hammer forged heavy barrel.
The barrel is dated 1971.
Above average conversion, most of the ones i've seen were in chopped original stocks.
Could well have been in the armoury as a unit club gun.
Some years ago I bought a couple of Long Branch DCRA rifles which had been sold off by the local unit's rifle club.
If it is/was a U.S. Model of 1917, then it most definitely is not a Parker Hale C3!! The post WWII British sniper rifle was the Parker Hale M82, with a Parker Hale made receiver, scope mounts, etc. When Canada adopted it, they named it the C3 - wooden stock, 6 power scope. It became the C3a1 in the 1970's with a fibreglass stock and a 10 power scope. I suspect what you have is a M1917 converted into a target rifle - I believe the full-bore discipline required the use of iron (aperture) sights - at ranges of 800, 900 and 1,000 yards - much later the "F-Class" was adopted that allowed the use of scopes. I do not know for sure, but I suspect various parts of the Canadian military had much interest in target shooting competitions and would have tried to outfit their shooters with "the best", including, perhaps, "one of a kind" custom conversions from older rifles. I doubt very much that such target rifles would ever be considered to arm soldiers on deployment.



























