There is always possibility of making a clone of one of those rifles.I has been done and few were presented here with very good response.
Finding random parts is part of it. Doing it well probably starts with hours of reading good reference material to understand what kind of parts you are actually looking for - which kind went with which, how they were mounted or installed, etc. Which scope went with which version that used which type of mount at what time. The milsurps.com library has some useful stuff regarding Lee Enfields and some others. Gotta start by picking who's sniper rifle from what era are you going to clone... an American Civil War Whitworth, a Winchester P14 from WWI or a British No. 4 (T) from WWII, a USA Remington from Vietnam conflict or a Russian, a Bosnian, a Chinese and so on.
an American Civil War Whitworth
Good luck with that. The example recently shown by Ian McCullum in 'Forgotten Weapons' was sold at Rock Island Arsenal auctions for USD$161,000.
I grabbed up a PEM M39 last year, has only the vaguest historical influence but was really well done and shoots great. I can even reproduce the Finn’s D166 round with Lapua components. Good fun if not cheap.
Lol, you forgot the preceding sentence: “first you gotta choose what rifle you’re gonna clone...”.Pedersoli makes a credible reproduction. Could also do a Sharps.



























