Jim, I have a few comments.
1. The USMC modified perhaps somewhere on the order of 800 to 1000 M1903A1 rifles with 8x Unertl Scopes for sniper rifles. This was done after the Marine hierarchy turned down the original recommendation of a Winchester Model 70 w/ 8X Unertl Telescope.
2. About 1700 Unertl Scopes were delivered before the contract was cancelled in February of 1944 at the order of the Commandant.. The reason cited was the combination "had not proven effective in combat".
At the same time he directed his subordinates to obtain 1000 M1903A4's from the Army when the M1903A1's were exhausted.
3. Their is a comprehensive file of USMC Sniper documentation available reproduced in Senich and through SRS nowhere in that documentation is their a reference to "M1941". Clark Campbell suggests the term may have been coined to refer to the Winchester Model 70/ Unertl combination.
4. Most of the worlds sniper rifles in the WW2 era were equipped with telescopes having 2.5X to 4X magnification. The Germans fielded a few 6X scopes and of course the Marines had the Unertl. But the advantage of higher magnification in a sniper rifle is questionable (at least in the equipment of 60 to 70 years ago). Higher power equalled a narrower field of view and dimmer images at dawn and dusk (some of the specific problems cited with the Unertl). Furthermore a telescope employing a loose sliding mount on the battlefield is ay a disadvantage but then we had found this out in WW1 with the Winchester A5 equipped '03's.
It will be interesting to see what happens in this years CMP matches. Will a modernized version shoot the pants off the competition..who knows?
Regards,
Jim
1. The USMC modified perhaps somewhere on the order of 800 to 1000 M1903A1 rifles with 8x Unertl Scopes for sniper rifles. This was done after the Marine hierarchy turned down the original recommendation of a Winchester Model 70 w/ 8X Unertl Telescope.
2. About 1700 Unertl Scopes were delivered before the contract was cancelled in February of 1944 at the order of the Commandant.. The reason cited was the combination "had not proven effective in combat".
At the same time he directed his subordinates to obtain 1000 M1903A4's from the Army when the M1903A1's were exhausted.
3. Their is a comprehensive file of USMC Sniper documentation available reproduced in Senich and through SRS nowhere in that documentation is their a reference to "M1941". Clark Campbell suggests the term may have been coined to refer to the Winchester Model 70/ Unertl combination.
4. Most of the worlds sniper rifles in the WW2 era were equipped with telescopes having 2.5X to 4X magnification. The Germans fielded a few 6X scopes and of course the Marines had the Unertl. But the advantage of higher magnification in a sniper rifle is questionable (at least in the equipment of 60 to 70 years ago). Higher power equalled a narrower field of view and dimmer images at dawn and dusk (some of the specific problems cited with the Unertl). Furthermore a telescope employing a loose sliding mount on the battlefield is ay a disadvantage but then we had found this out in WW1 with the Winchester A5 equipped '03's.
It will be interesting to see what happens in this years CMP matches. Will a modernized version shoot the pants off the competition..who knows?
Regards,
Jim

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