USMC sniper

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  • mitchell6776
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2009
    • 101

    #1

    USMC sniper

    I have no skin in this game. Just curious if this is a legitimate sniper.

    https://www.gunbroker.com/item/869986867
  • John Beard
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 2275

    #2
    I vote not legitimate.

    J.B.

    Comment

    • Promo
      Senior Member
      • Jun 2011
      • 335

      #3
      No. Someone paying 16k for a fake will be disappointed.

      Comment

      • Ironlip
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2009
        • 309

        #4
        Should the bolt and bolt handle be bright? On a National Match or a Sporter, yes, but that seems odd in a rifle intended for combat.

        Also, those mounts appear to be the correct type, but all the ones I have seen in the past have been blued. Is that finish correct?

        Comment

        • lyman
          Administrator - OFC
          • Aug 2009
          • 11269

          #5
          looks to me like, as mentioned, a parts gun,

          too many finish variations, (example the brown windage knob and magazine floor plate, vs the barrel and rear sight for example) for me to think otherwise

          Comment

          • Tom Trevor
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2009
            • 566

            #6
            2,176.50 sold. OOPS wrong 03 the Marine Pearl harbor sold for this.
            Last edited by Tom Trevor; 06-15-2020, 01:52.

            Comment

            • clintonhater
              Senior Member
              • Nov 2015
              • 5220

              #7
              Originally posted by Tom Trevor
              2,176.50 sold.
              What? Sold for $16,500+. However, it was worth every penny, because not only is it "blue chip," according to seller's modest description, it's "super rare"! Got to step up to the plate for "super rare."

              Sure wish Steve Norton was still around.

              Comment

              • lyman
                Administrator - OFC
                • Aug 2009
                • 11269

                #8
                Originally posted by clintonhater
                What? Sold for $16,500+. However, it was worth every penny, because not only is it "blue chip," according to seller's modest description, it's "super rare"! Got to step up to the plate for "super rare."

                Sure wish Steve Norton was still around.
                yep $16525,

                the scope and blocks are probably worth half that, or close,


                CplNorton is still around, just not here that often

                Comment

                • cplnorton
                  Senior Member
                  • Sep 2009
                  • 2194

                  #9
                  I need to check over here more often. lol I've been fixing up an old 68 Camaro to take my kids cruising in, so that has been occupying my time lately.

                  But no I concur the rifle has no chance of being real. We actually have a Unertl group and several pointed out some of the bidding looked suspicious.

                  His description too, well I have no clue where he is getting that info from, but none of the history he describes of the Marine Sniper program is accurate either. Like how he describes SA built the Marines a 1000 snipers, and put in a order for an additional 2500.

                  The Marines received 1750 scopes and only converted for sure 250 of the 1047 NM rifles they started the program with. It never details exactly for sure how many were converted as even the Marines Corps didn't know in 1945. But it states they never converted them all.

                  My own personal opinion is they probably only converted the 250 and not many more. Only the first four Marine Divisions had them and each Division received roughly 50. So the 250 shipped to the Pacific in 1943 were more than enough to outfit the four Divisions. Even looking at the counts of the rifles in the Divisions, the 250 was way more than they needed. Especially since they really weren't used much till Okinawa.

                  Also in 1951 the Marines state they can not supply the required 100 Unertl Snipers to each Marine Division as prescribed by the T/O. Which there were only 2 Marine Divisions at that time. So it seems to imply that less than 200 Unertl Snipers existed in 1951 in the Marine Corps.


                  Unfortunately someone will learn a hard lesson on buying this.
                  Last edited by cplnorton; 06-15-2020, 02:34.

                  Comment

                  • clintonhater
                    Senior Member
                    • Nov 2015
                    • 5220

                    #10
                    Originally posted by cplnorton
                    Unfortunately someone will learn a hard lesson on buying this.
                    Not so sure about that, Steve. Maybe some day, if he runs into someone like you. But he obviously swallowed the seller's "super rare" hype hook, line, & sinker. Over & over I've seen, the thicker the BS is spread, the more greedily it's lapped up.

                    Comment

                    • cplnorton
                      Senior Member
                      • Sep 2009
                      • 2194

                      #11
                      Originally posted by Ironlip
                      Should the bolt and bolt handle be bright? On a National Match or a Sporter, yes, but that seems odd in a rifle intended for combat.

                      Also, those mounts appear to be the correct type, but all the ones I have seen in the past have been blued. Is that finish correct?
                      The books say they can have a bright polished bolt, but I don't think there is any chance this is correct on an original as produced rifle. In July 1942 the Marines took inventory of all their NM rifles they planned on using for the Sniper program. They had a 1047 of them, and they notate that the bolts of those rifles are bright polished. So they were ordered to take All of the polished bolts and put them thru a bluing process and put them into storage marked Sniper equipment.

                      Six months later the order is given to start mounting scopes. So those bolts were blued long before the first scope was ever mounted. Not only should every Marine Unertl Sniper have a blued bolt, but all the Marine NM rifles at that time should have had a blued bolt. Even the ones not converted to a sniper rifle.

                      The finish on the mounts on the scope are correct. They are anodized. Over time the Anodizing will start to turn colors. Originally they were black, but that is normal for these scopes.
                      Last edited by cplnorton; 06-16-2020, 02:54.

                      Comment

                      • cplnorton
                        Senior Member
                        • Sep 2009
                        • 2194

                        #12
                        Originally posted by clintonhater
                        Not so sure about that, Steve. Maybe some day, if he runs into someone like you. But he obviously swallowed the seller's "super rare" hype hook, line, & sinker. Over & over I've seen, the thicker the BS is spread, the more greedily it's lapped up.
                        Yeah you are correct. I know who this seller is. He sets up at the one collector show I set up at. I don't know him personally, just in passing.

                        Here maybe a year or two ago, there were two rifles sold at the RIA auction. One rifle was owned by a author and it was in his some of his books. The other rifle had fake paperwork forged by a computer saying the Marine Corps Museum sold it. Both rifles sold for about 40k each. The sad thing is, the same buyer bought both. Neither rifle was real.

                        He wrote me maybe a week after the sale to talk to me about the rifles to find out anything more. I sat for an hour writing him different emails and erasing each one. I couldn't even formulate what to say to that. So I told him to call me. He was one of the nicest guys. He had saved up and used a chunk of his retirement savings to get his holy grail rifles and he thought because one had been in a book and the other had paperwork, he would be ok.

                        I love this hobby and the people I meet, but that was by far one of the hardest phone conversations I've had. There are a lot of dishonest people in this field.

                        By the way I still am very thankful for your article you sent me that you wrote on Steven's. If anyone on here is a Steven's scope researcher, Clintonhater is by far the most knowledgeable person I have ever ran across on them. He wrote and published a article that is light years ahead of any other research I have seen on the topic. I have it filed in my archives and I read that actually a lot.

                        On a side note, you will laugh at this. Remember my famous 6 vs 8 loop case argument years ago on here. You and I talked about this a lot back in the day. I found a bunch of unpublished photos of WWI Marine Snipers at sniper school, at Quantico, buried at a regional Archive location. In there is a pic of a bunch of them in class for the Winchester A5 scope. All have 6 loop leather cases on their shoulders. lol I figured you would get a kick out of that.
                        Last edited by cplnorton; 06-16-2020, 03:13.

                        Comment

                        • clintonhater
                          Senior Member
                          • Nov 2015
                          • 5220

                          #13
                          Originally posted by cplnorton
                          Remember my famous 6 vs 8 loop case argument years ago on here.
                          Remember? My head's still aching!

                          Comment

                          • Kragrifle
                            Senior Member
                            • Nov 2010
                            • 1161

                            #14
                            I am familiar with this seller. I suspect there is some spurious bidding. Not too long ago he “sold” a Rock Island 1903 for over $7000, way more than it’s true value,

                            A quick question- I thought the Marine Corp built these rifles , no?

                            Comment

                            • lyman
                              Administrator - OFC
                              • Aug 2009
                              • 11269

                              #15
                              Originally posted by Kragrifle
                              I am familiar with this seller. I suspect there is some spurious bidding. Not too long ago he “sold” a Rock Island 1903 for over $7000, way more than it’s true value,

                              A quick question- I thought the Marine Corp built these rifles , no?

                              I went thru and looked at some of the current auctions,

                              one, the 'pre python' Colt 357 revolver is a hot mess,

                              nothing wrong with the gun, but the Colt 357 was not a 'Pre Python' revolver, it is a different model,


                              there are several folks that have bid on more that one of his auctions (a couple are people I have sold to in the past on GB,, doubtful they are shills) but then again, having people buy several firearms from the same dealer is not exactly uncommon,

                              Comment

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