The overall shape of the rifle matters most. But, as V.R. states, the No4 has a head start. It's longer, recoil is less severe (thus helping the shooter that I am achieve less horrible accuracy when attempting to hit paper at 100 yards). I'd even say that the fact that the front and rear sights are more distant from one another on the No4 may technically have something to do with better accuracy.
The look and feel is quite different between both.
That said, a good marksman will be able to hit a target with both, unless they are shot out.
If you are bitten by the milsurp bug we all know you'll get both
Lou


wouldn't a shorter barrel be *more* accurate since it would be stiffer?, but longer sight radius helps the shooter. and recoil is less on the #4.
i'll be first to mention the wandering zero myth.

It's not a myth, Laidler covered this repeatedly on Jouster forum. Some JC's have it, some don't. But you never hear of a No 4 having it...![]()
Ps. The blade bayonet for the jc is waay cooler for charging at paper!
i assume he used scientific methodology to prove it?
Laidler's not a scientist, just the longest serving armourer in the British Army.
Laidler's not a scientist, just the longest serving armourer in the British Army.



























