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Britain's Tubeless WW1 Sniper Optics: Martin Galilean Sight 

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When Britain entered the First World War, it had no formal sniper program. Germany was the first combatant to train and utilize snipers, and their effectiveness quickly convinced the British military that a similar program was necessary. Initially a wide variety of rifles were put into service, including many scoped hunting rifles send form the British Isles. These were of little use, as they were in non-standard calibers, and not generally rugged enough to survive the rigors of WW1. The first uniform equipment purchased and used were several versions of Galilean optical sights.
Introduced into competition shooting at Bisley before the war, this is a type of magnified sight which uses independent lenses mounted to the front and rear of a rifle (some fitted to the SMLE rear sight and some attached to the back of the receiver). This was low profile, relatively inexpensive, and quick to put into service, but the sights themselves were severely handicapped compared to modern telescopes. They offered about 2.5x magnification and a very large depth of field, but at the cost of a very narrow field of view and small eyebox. They were also easily dirtied, and the front aiming point was often difficult to discern against the background image.
The four main models purchased by the British were Lattey, Neill, Martin, and Gibbs. The model in this video is a Martin, patented by J.E. Martin of Glasgow. Once proper telescopes became available, they rendered the Galilean optics obsolete, and very few survived the war.
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11 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 728   
@jackyichan4759
@jackyichan4759 5 лет назад
Only the British would make a tactical monocle.
@Historyfreak-f7o
@Historyfreak-f7o 5 лет назад
Jack YiChan terribly, old boy!
@nicholasholloway8743
@nicholasholloway8743 4 года назад
Jack YiChan lol. Underrated comment for sure
@thamas_420
@thamas_420 4 года назад
As a british person i can confirm
@cedricpidde2633
@cedricpidde2633 4 года назад
Thee gentleman’s EOTec
@robgoodsight6216
@robgoodsight6216 4 года назад
Hahahahahah
@lokitakahashi3042
@lokitakahashi3042 4 года назад
the Germans "convinced" the British that they needed a sniper program. i don't think you could have put that any more lightly XD
@LeonardAngussmith
@LeonardAngussmith 5 лет назад
Back in the UK when I was a kid , someone I encountered . Sometime in the fifties , had a set. No one knew what it was , all of the kids played with it. Now I know what it was. It was being passed as a 'bit of broken binoculars from the war.' I remember the the front sight with the dot and the ring.
@camelthegamer7165
@camelthegamer7165 5 лет назад
Please, find it if you can.
@thedonstandsalone7488
@thedonstandsalone7488 5 лет назад
you expect them to just.. go back and find something they saw 70 years ago?
@peregrine3845
@peregrine3845 5 лет назад
@@thedonstandsalone7488 lmao
@njones420
@njones420 5 лет назад
It's just the sort of thing that's sitting in the bottom of a box, at the back of you grandads shed... I regularly see weird military oddities like this at car boot sales, but no idea what most of them are, usually neither do the sellers.
@Arthiem
@Arthiem 5 лет назад
those are worth a pretty penny these days, thanks to Battlefield One
@Arthurzeiro
@Arthurzeiro 5 лет назад
I'm impressed that a fragile piece of glass near the muzzle of a rifle doesn't get damaged by everything going on when the rifle is fired.
@RealCadde
@RealCadde 5 лет назад
Recoil is the problem, not percussion. And even then, just above the end of the barrel there's not much more percussion than anywhere else along the barrel anyways. What destroys optical sights today is recoil. Hence why there's different levels of quality available for different rifles. On your bog standard 5.56 mm assault rifle, you can use pretty much any sight without issue. But when you increase the caliber to 7.62 mm, attach it to hunting rifles or even shotguns shooting slugs you destroy those sights.
@leonardpearlman4017
@leonardpearlman4017 5 лет назад
Glass is not necessarily fragile!
@1timcat
@1timcat 5 лет назад
They were fine on the range but the field was hard on them.
@anzaca1
@anzaca1 5 лет назад
Percussion from small arms isn't that hard on glass etc.
@praveen-ls9te
@praveen-ls9te 5 лет назад
@dustisdeadbodies85 i tried got hurt i know its tough,,😒🤕
@ScottKenny1978
@ScottKenny1978 4 года назад
Need to mount those on a converted semi-auto, for maximum steampunk.
@KickyFut
@KickyFut 4 года назад
Some of my favorite Jakobs pistols in Borderlands 3 use those sights...😅
@RoscoesRiffs
@RoscoesRiffs 3 года назад
Perfect for hunting dragons on Venus from the Howdah of your bat blimp!
@bigmike9947
@bigmike9947 2 года назад
Put one on the Turner SMLE, ultimate steampunk battle rifle
@ScottKenny1978
@ScottKenny1978 2 года назад
@@bigmike9947 for extra fun, there's that Gewehr 71 Ian found with a big horseshoe magazine. Convert that to a semi auto, fit it with these sights, you have achieved maximum steampunk!
@tangocollective-entropysys6676
@tangocollective-entropysys6676 2 года назад
@@ScottKenny1978 don't forget to add random gears onto everything that don't seem to have use
@edwalmsley1401
@edwalmsley1401 5 лет назад
I am seeing one advantage over telescopic sights,the dont make it "look" like a sniper rifle,a guy with that rifle slung would look like a regular infantry man
@warriorwolf77
@warriorwolf77 5 лет назад
I could be wrong but I'm pretty sure sniper rifles of the era were carried with the scope detached and in a hard leather case on their belt, they really weren't good enough quality to even risk them being dropped. Though I can't say that it was that way for all rifles so don't take my word on it
@firstlast2052
@firstlast2052 5 лет назад
not to mention it won't block stripper clips whilst staying horizontally aligned with the barrel.
@user-ns3vs3bp3e
@user-ns3vs3bp3e 5 лет назад
First Last the British scopes didn’t block stripper clips anyway they were offset enough to avoid it
@firstlast2052
@firstlast2052 5 лет назад
@@user-ns3vs3bp3e that's why i mentioned "horizontally aligned".
@TheLoxxxton
@TheLoxxxton 5 лет назад
Yeah but it's just cool. End of!
@RavenDrakearud
@RavenDrakearud 5 лет назад
Battlefield 1 made optical sighs such as these seem *waaaaaay* more useful than they were.
@AngryBulldogGaming
@AngryBulldogGaming 5 лет назад
haters were saying that they didn't had optical sights back then lmao they talk before even knowing the facts.
@baker90338
@baker90338 5 лет назад
Angry Bulldog Gaming to be fair it’s kinda only the British who tried this
@ThisNewHandleSystemSucks
@ThisNewHandleSystemSucks 5 лет назад
@@AngryBulldogGaming Whether the technology existed at the time isn't up for contest. What is largely argued is that the majority of the firearms and equipment in Battlefield 1 were fielded in very limited numbers, or only to specialized units, or sometimes not at all.
@rodgersmith1573
@rodgersmith1573 5 лет назад
@@ThisNewHandleSystemSucks Battlefield 1, from a historical perspective, is a letdown. It was the first glimpse into EA's 'catering to the Call of Duty kiddies', apparent by the over the top designs which could be applied to the rifles. I say 'first glimpse', because by Battlefield V, it became too much, and even the Call of Duty franchise seems to be turning it around. Yes, firearm's engraving existed, and yes gold inlaying was a thing. However, the sheer number of knuckleheads running amok with an electroplated gold, engraved Hellreigel speaks volumes as to the historical accuracy. That which grinds my gears more so anything else about Battlefield 1, though, has always been the rather cheap approach EA made to the weapons. Whereas one could have simply made modifications to any given firearm a player-based choice, as with Battlefield 4, they instead made the choice to provide us with fewer weapons, and simply repeat them as a different 'variant'. Even if that supposed 'variant' were nothing more than one which featured some added vertical grip. If that were the direction they thought best, it would have been much cooler had they maintained a more technical standpoint. For example, the Vetterli-Vitali 1870 or 1870/87 in its original 10.4x47mmR, then the next variant being the 1870/87/15, which was converted to 6.5 Carcano. Or, a 1915 8mm Lebel Chauchat versus the 1918 Chauchat in 30-06.
@funnyvalentinedidnothingwrong
@funnyvalentinedidnothingwrong 5 лет назад
@Joe Ç Or the Kolibri, which packed a round so anemic you'd probably be more likely to kill someone by throwing the gun at them than actually firing it.
@frankberry9642
@frankberry9642 4 года назад
I handled a version of this sight many years ago when I was a guest in the home of the late Geoffrey Boothroyd. While it may not have been up to the rigours of trench warfare, I think that with modern materials, it would be a could be an option for lightweight sporting rifles. It is certainly a lot lighter than a conventional scope.
@daveh777
@daveh777 2 года назад
A bloke with a name like Geoffrey Boothroyd would be the type you'd expect to have a set of these sights.
@djwoody1649
@djwoody1649 5 лет назад
I know a bloke who shoots a one of these systems on his SMLE, he says it does actually help a reasonable amount.
@SuperUltraNinja1
@SuperUltraNinja1 5 лет назад
Incredibly interesting, never heard of these. Thanks!
@rancidpitts8243
@rancidpitts8243 5 лет назад
Same here; everything you just said.
@nevillewebb6259
@nevillewebb6259 5 лет назад
The Australian War Memorial has a SMLE with only the front optic mounted on it, but its right at the end of the barrel- in front of the iron sight.
@9HoleReviews
@9HoleReviews 5 лет назад
I would really like this.
@anthonyhayes1267
@anthonyhayes1267 3 года назад
I really need to see a practical accuracy video on this
@philsmith214
@philsmith214 3 года назад
@@anthonyhayes1267 very accurate, a chap at my gun club has a enfield the same i was amazed , 👍
@ellismidkiff6117
@ellismidkiff6117 3 года назад
@@anthonyhayes1267 stacks of dead bodies aren’t enough?
@darius359au
@darius359au 5 лет назад
my family has a set of the lattey sights that were used by my great grandfather who was in the Australian 9th Light Horse in ww1
@dr.johnpaladinshow9747
@dr.johnpaladinshow9747 5 лет назад
Hang on to them!! I just spent a fair amount of time searching for any for sale... none to be found. As Ian said they are "embarassingly" expensive. AND... you have some providence by dent of you Great Grandfather.
@TooPassionate
@TooPassionate 4 года назад
I want to buy the set. Wanna sell? JOHN
@crf80fdarkdays
@crf80fdarkdays 2 года назад
Bruh, like a whole set with all the different lenses?
@bobjones5166
@bobjones5166 5 лет назад
Archers have been using the same type of system for optic sights on bows for years. There is a tiny lens in the peep sight and the main lens mounted on the riser of the bow. The main difference is that all adjustments for the one on bows is done on the front lens and not the rear.
@cardiffpicker1
@cardiffpicker1 5 лет назад
They haven't been using them for that long in comparison to these .
@andrewkieper5613
@andrewkieper5613 5 лет назад
The one in the peep isn't magnified either... just a clarifier I run them on my target setup.
@dasy2k1
@dasy2k1 5 лет назад
That was my thought as well that it was very similar to a peep and front sight setup on a compound bow! Although given I only shoot recurve I'm not allowed anything as fancy
@myparceltape1169
@myparceltape1169 3 года назад
I had never imagined that archers would use such a thing. I always thought they used a wrinkle on their skin to aim by. Or something like that.
@alsaunders7805
@alsaunders7805 3 года назад
@@myparceltape1169 Some like myself use instinctive aiming. It's like shooting a shotgun, you hold the bow the same way and bring the arrow to the same point on your cheek every time. You look at your target, nothing else, and the bow moves with you. With practice this method can be surprisingly accurate. 🤓🍻
@bigchooch4434
@bigchooch4434 5 лет назад
It's always amazing to me to see small complex mechanical devices attached to various firearms. If you've ever seen a gun fire in slow motion, you know the whole thing looks like it's going to shake itself apart under its own recoil. Crazy how something relatively delicate like this can withstand those forces and maintain zero.
@MaskedVengeanceTV
@MaskedVengeanceTV 5 лет назад
I remember way back in the day watching Akira kurosawa's Steam boy. One of the villian's tries to take a potshot at the protagonist with a rifle equiped with galellean sights. Instead of thinking " oh no! I hope the main characters okay" I really, really admired those gusights and wondered to myself if there was ever a real world example. Now I know. And they are gorgeous. Thank you Ian, your my hero.
@camelthegamer7165
@camelthegamer7165 5 лет назад
He's no hero, he's Gun Jesus!
@chrismcqueen3920
@chrismcqueen3920 5 лет назад
Steam Boy was an underrated movie
@MaskedVengeanceTV
@MaskedVengeanceTV 5 лет назад
@DH oh man I'm glad you pointed it out. I wouldnt have been able to sleep right cuz I didn't spell a word right. If I wanted to be edited, I would have asked my spell check app. Not some stupid RU-vidr that probably has OCD. You wanker.
@dylonkremers8340
@dylonkremers8340 5 лет назад
@DH I'm just trying to figure out what you are trying to correct, because what is currently there, is correct.
@ArkhBaegor
@ArkhBaegor 5 лет назад
Akira kurosawa never a movie called Steam Boy
@nickRS100
@nickRS100 3 года назад
Thanks for that. My great grandfather was indeed a Bisley shot with the prizes to prove it. I do an internet search for “Lattey sight” from time to time over the years and this video means I actually understand the idea for the first time! This is the closest I’ve come to actually seeing the type of sight in real life!
@GunsNGames1
@GunsNGames1 5 лет назад
So mate, you made me a optical snipeh sight? Well yes, but actually no.
@miloradowicz
@miloradowicz 5 лет назад
"It's not the size that matters..."
@Jayhawkga
@Jayhawkga 5 лет назад
Yes, yes, yes. No.
@willspears754
@willspears754 5 лет назад
yeah... nah...
@TheSemajshadow
@TheSemajshadow 4 года назад
Most English comment ever
@francis9428
@francis9428 3 года назад
**sips tea in rage**
@fireaza
@fireaza 4 года назад
British General 1: "I say Reginald, have you heard word of the Germans? They say they are equipping their infantry with sniper rifles! Most un-sportman like conduct, wot!" British General 2: **SIPPING TEA** "Quite right, old boy! Tis typical of the cowardly Germans! **British General 1 and British General 2 engage in haughty chortling** **A bullet whizzes past, shattering British General 2's tea cup** British General 2: "MY WORD! Upon some reflection, I dare say that it would be most prudent that we equip our forces in a similar manner, as un-gentlemanly though it may be!"
@nathanthom8176
@nathanthom8176 4 года назад
They had weird ideas in world war 1. Mustard gas fine but trench shotguns definetly not okay.
@eggythumpnonce9082
@eggythumpnonce9082 4 года назад
You forget the fact the general would have ordered a artillery strike on the Germans bc he lost a cup of tea
@DH-xw6jp
@DH-xw6jp 4 года назад
Alternative ending: Gerneral 2: my word! Refill the kettle ol' chap, I'll be back in a jiffy. *attaches monocle to rifle* have at it, you ill-mannered cur! *loads rifle with monarchical intent*
@markhasleton6403
@markhasleton6403 4 года назад
The British Officer class of the time was known for its inbred stupidity. The Germans had an apt expression , describing British infantry as " lions led by donkeys "
@chrisresnikoff1741
@chrisresnikoff1741 4 года назад
British officers don't duck!
@burningcenturion6935
@burningcenturion6935 5 лет назад
Very interesting. I love all the weird World War 1 equipment that got used before anyone actually new what to do.
@vcostello712
@vcostello712 5 лет назад
Tanks are great for this. They figured out the "armored thing full of dudes that can move around" part, the whole "armaments" thing seems to have perplexed them a bit. "How many cannons should we put on this thing, Stevens?" "Yes."
@ajeje1996
@ajeje1996 5 лет назад
@@vcostello712 When you consider that the first tanks (like the MKI) were basically moving gas chambers with the added bonus of almost being able to do somersaults, they didn't really figure out the first part all that well either, lol
@MrGrimsmith
@MrGrimsmith 5 лет назад
@@vcostello712 Alternative answer: "All of them". Primary thing though is they were designed to do a job, not look pretty and were totally new territory. In true British tradition the first one was a nice idea, not particularly well done and we continued to "fix" the bits that worked until they were broken and leave the bits that were broken the hell alone as at least we knew *how* they were broken. Oddly enough, knwoing the typical British mentality rather well, I'm surprised that the idea of these sights was given up on so rapidly. It would normally take a bare minimum of two decades for the idea that something we didn't already have (in the military sense) was superior! :D
@thevladdo
@thevladdo 5 лет назад
really wanted to see what these actually looked like after seeing them in BF1. thank you Ian.
@metamorphicorder
@metamorphicorder 5 лет назад
As mentioned, open optical sights kinda like this are in use on bows today. Additionally, open or tubless optics are also still used in a surprisingly useful child's toy called the optic wonder. Also the optic wonder junior. Certainly you can order these today but can probably be found in the gift shops of most zoos and museums in the united states. Its basically a plastic set of binoculars with the lenses that fold into the body. The focus is adjustable but there is no enclosure for the optics other than the rings in which they are mounted. Additionally it typically has a whistle built into it along with a very basic and janky compass, a angle guide for range and height estimation and a signal mirror. Also a lanyard. The objective lenses can be used singly as magnifiers or fire starters. Its kinda a junior survival tool kinda toy to introduce the concepts and it comes sometimes with a pouch to store it in. Cool toy from my childhood i thought of when i saw this.
@thetruthseeker5549
@thetruthseeker5549 5 лет назад
Ian Said, "List Of Changes" casually and didn't feel obliged to explain what that is too the British Army. That's progress!
@MrWackyfunster
@MrWackyfunster 5 лет назад
I just finished watching the Australian series Gallipoli where the ANZAC snipers used these sights. I was trying to figure out how they worked as I was watching it and now I know.
@loupiscanis9449
@loupiscanis9449 5 лет назад
Thank you Ian , Thank you , Collector .
@TheAegisClaw
@TheAegisClaw 5 лет назад
That exactly how archery target compound sights work.
@animalxINSTINCT89
@animalxINSTINCT89 5 лет назад
Slap one of those on a Mondragon and you've got yourself a top 3 finish
@littlebigheroman
@littlebigheroman 5 лет назад
2-gun match versus a starlight M-14?
@lyntMon6482
@lyntMon6482 5 лет назад
I Just finished watching the Gallipoli Series and Bam, here is his rifle! Good Timing!
@chrisproost7290
@chrisproost7290 3 года назад
I saw it too, wasn't bad at all tbh and I remember the sequence where the protagonist, going through a rough time, volunteers to snipe and is issued with these optics. Always wondered why these and not telescopic sights even if it was earlier in the course of the war. Well, now I know...
@coreygolder6503
@coreygolder6503 3 года назад
@@jason200912 generate kill. The long road home. There is a few if you jump online and search them.
@user-ns3vs3bp3e
@user-ns3vs3bp3e 5 лет назад
I went my whole life not knowing these existed then in about a week I’ve seen this then they were shown in the season finale of peaky blinders
@konnigkratz
@konnigkratz 5 лет назад
Huzzah! From Q&A Question to video, I am most pleased!
@1timcat
@1timcat 5 лет назад
I was trying to remember when he spoke of them before.
@marksman303
@marksman303 4 года назад
I'm honestly surprised that I've never heard of this system before.
@peterwallace9764
@peterwallace9764 4 года назад
Similar to Peep Sights on 7.62 Parker Hale target shooting. Front sights had interchangeable lenses.
@johnmorgan1629
@johnmorgan1629 5 лет назад
The addition of hoods and a cone for the shooters eye, would probably have improved the visibility, but is you're going to do that, might as well build a full tube telescopic sight from scratch. It is amazing to think, the British hadn't thought about the advantages of sniping in modern warfare at the time, or developing telescopic sights, with the improvements in accuracy they bring. After all sniper teams are not just about long range actions, but collecting intel.
@alexandermarinin7036
@alexandermarinin7036 5 лет назад
At least they didn't put on red pants
@Simon_Nonymous
@Simon_Nonymous 5 лет назад
A good point, but consider the cost and scarcity of telecopic sights at this time in history, plus I don't think anyone expected the trench warfare where modern sniping has its roots. By the end of the Great War, I would suggest Empire troops were possibly leaders in the field, but I am usually wrong :-)
@DLBBALL
@DLBBALL 5 лет назад
WW1/WW2 had a massive impact on modern military doctrines.
@Afro408
@Afro408 2 года назад
Very interesting bit of history! 👏👍😁 Here in Australia, quite a few of our older shooters with poor eyesight, were and possibly still are using what is called a Hawkeye lens, but in the rear sight only. No front lens has been allowed for a long time. The Hawkeye just sharpens up the image of both the front element and the target, without magnifying anything. Just like that comment referring to a ‘monocle’, because that’s exactly what is, a single ‘mono’ lens.
@trooperburger123
@trooperburger123 5 лет назад
Was feeling unwell; a cold. Sees a video by Ian about a unique SMLE. Suddenly feels much better :).
@camelthegamer7165
@camelthegamer7165 5 лет назад
A better rifle than the other bolt action rifles used, but I still love my country's M1 Garend. A squad of our soldiers outclassed everyone in terms of suppressive force and raw firepower. You just can't beat semi-auto with bolt action.
@RavingRaptor
@RavingRaptor 5 лет назад
Ian seems even more energetic and excited in this video than usual. I mean, who would'nt be handling something like this?
@lasersharksushi1975
@lasersharksushi1975 5 лет назад
I would love to see a more modern version of this. It could be a very lightweight option for magnification if you used plastic lenses like in glasses instead of actual glass.
@vettekid3326
@vettekid3326 5 лет назад
Kinda like a poor man's red dot sight, better than nothing else but just barely.
@tz8785
@tz8785 5 лет назад
Making that dot properly red probably would have been a significant improvement.
@zacht9447
@zacht9447 5 лет назад
Nah the Nydar is a real poor mans red dot sight
@Kari-tu3fs
@Kari-tu3fs 5 лет назад
Yes, because buying one of those would make you poor.
@Arthiem
@Arthiem 5 лет назад
@@tz8785 they did make them illuminated with Radium paint. which was used for watches.
@hunterprokurat9909
@hunterprokurat9909 4 года назад
I dunno i found a pos red dot for 14 bucks
@makeitsonumberone1358
@makeitsonumberone1358 5 лет назад
I watch all your old videos and my observation is you never age lol.
@ts-wo6pp
@ts-wo6pp 5 лет назад
Gun Jesus is eternal
@thelizardking3807
@thelizardking3807 5 лет назад
How old is he?
@gabemando7823
@gabemando7823 4 года назад
The Lizard King 2000 years old
@DH-xw6jp
@DH-xw6jp 4 года назад
@@thelizardking3807 the word on the street is that he was the One to teach the chinese the secrets of blackpowder.
@makeitsonumberone1358
@makeitsonumberone1358 2 года назад
@@DH-xw6jp 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@dgoodman1484
@dgoodman1484 3 месяца назад
It’s pretty important to remember that most of the war was spent sitting in a trench making sure the enemy, who was far enough away that you couldn’t really see him, did the same and wasn’t up to something. So when he was, it was advantageous to lob a few rounds in his direction to convince him to stop. A little magnification would have helped a great deal in being able to see the general area your spotter indicated the scallion was active in. I highly doubt anyone was going over the wall with one attached so in reality it really was much like shooting at a tournament except that you had to be sneaky setting up your position less the other side spotted your nefarious activity and started lobbing round in your direction
@craigthemonke794
@craigthemonke794 3 года назад
I wish these were still made, I really like how it’s a lighter and simpler version of a scope
@johntamplin
@johntamplin 2 года назад
Firstly, I really enjoy Ian's videos and his authentic delivery (down-to-earth, not overly slick) is a large part of the appeal. But as he acknowledges several times during this one, it would be good to have a little more production on some of the fine details, like the view through the lens. An occasional graphic to illustrate some technical points would also be appreciated. However, these minor requests aside, this is still one of my 'go to' channels for thoughtful, no bullshit information.
@SprikSprak
@SprikSprak 2 года назад
I've competitively shot rifles at Bisley years ago and we used a very similar setup still - a lens near the eye and a mount at the muzzle, interesting to see how long it's been around for!
@monsterboyuk6300
@monsterboyuk6300 4 года назад
It's quite interesting I shoot regularly at Bisley and I still see people practicing this type of shooting at 1000 yards on the stickledown range
@dunxy
@dunxy 5 лет назад
So kinda basically a peep,very interesting! I have a peep on my no4, i do like it a lot for target shooting, able to get under 2moa which is pretty good for an old 2 groove 303!
@OwOUwUOnO
@OwOUwUOnO 5 лет назад
I love being able to see & learn about things from this channel
@grahamking2239
@grahamking2239 5 лет назад
Shot with one at 1200 yds at Bisley works fine !
@blueband8114
@blueband8114 5 лет назад
I remember reading about these in one of Martin Peglers books. Think also in Hesketh Pritchards Sniping in France.
@nggames1246
@nggames1246 5 лет назад
A very cool concept, thank you for showing us Ian
@AbnormalObs
@AbnormalObs 4 года назад
I know I've said this before but I live in Australia so I will NEVER have the opportunity to get hands on with much of what you show. My fav part of your videos is the explanations for the use case, development, application, manufacturing etc everything before you start breaking the weapon down. LOVE YOUR WORK
@ardshielcomplex8917
@ardshielcomplex8917 2 года назад
Apply for a License, its worth the effort.
@MonkeyJedi99
@MonkeyJedi99 4 года назад
It's like the photo negative of the optic-less tubes on late 18th century marksman rifles.
@brilliantlysplendid
@brilliantlysplendid 4 года назад
Just as a comment from my optics class: the advantage of the Galilean-style telescope was that it produced an upright image (very useful for finding your target, I would imagine). The disadvantage, and I think this is why it was so uncomfortable to use, is that the eye relief is actually in front of the rear lens. So it isn’t actually possible to put your eye in a comfortable position.
@dawsongranger4940
@dawsongranger4940 5 лет назад
Finally those sights we see in bf1 and bf5
@phosphordiester7545
@phosphordiester7545 5 лет назад
The Lattey Sight in Bf V is somewhat different, I think.
@Krenki5555
@Krenki5555 5 лет назад
The one in Battlefield V are post-war aperture sights from 1946.
@fmrgt12
@fmrgt12 3 года назад
Hello Ian !!! Very Interesting. While in ex Yugoslavia, shooting sport / competitions were high on agenda because Tito wanted to have trained Marksman from early age. As such anything what could be done, was done. ( No Computer games i those days ). I started, at about 10 years of age to shoot .22 rifles , first open sights. than with " precision .22 rifles " ( Adjustable stock in vertical up or down " horse shoe " shoulder adjustment, forward and reverse adjustment for eye relive and hair trigger ). This is were I made my first acquittance with " DIOPTER SIGHTS ". All rifles were BRNO rifles made in Chekoslovakia. Those DIOPTER SIGHTS were excellent. It was like, shooting " sniper rife " without lances. ( at 50 meters, standard .22 competition range ).
@cooliobob1274
@cooliobob1274 5 лет назад
It'd be cool of this type of thing was made as flip-up sights for pictinny rails.
@smitty3624
@smitty3624 5 лет назад
I was wondering about these, I saw them in the Australian show "Gallipoli."
@singularkakapo
@singularkakapo 4 года назад
Me too! Then saw them in BF1 too
@jj-pm8ue
@jj-pm8ue 2 года назад
During WW1 the British were short on optics for making telescopic sights, the Germans were very low on rubber, so the British government actually contacted the Germans and proposed a deal where the Germans would supply the British with optics and in exchange the British would supply the Germans with rubber. A straight swap that could benefit each in its war effort. The Germans actually seriously considered the deal but the thought of the optics being used to straight out kill German soldiers put them off.....for some reason.... and the deal was refused. In retrospect it sounds ridiculous I know, just shows how strange things can get.
@GJ203
@GJ203 5 лет назад
I've been curious about these for as long as I've known about them. Thanks for the info!
@vincentmueller3717
@vincentmueller3717 День назад
The June 1959 issue of "Guns" magazine states,and showes,Galilan sights in use at civilian matches in England. One is captioned as being 2X.
@yaboikungpowfuckfinger7697
@yaboikungpowfuckfinger7697 5 лет назад
I really wish firearms like these were still produced with that same feel they had 100 years ago because they seem really fun to shoot
@BWGPEI
@BWGPEI 4 года назад
Many thanks to both you and the collector - this is very cool indeed.
@RichardCranium321
@RichardCranium321 5 лет назад
As a mechanical engineering tech, I love to see unique designs like this
@InkedUpHonda
@InkedUpHonda 3 года назад
Man I watch so many of these review/info videos. You’re very smooth and interesting. Good job brother.
@mtodd4723
@mtodd4723 5 лет назад
Thank you & the collector for bringing this video to us ! The look very neat .
@leonardpearlman4017
@leonardpearlman4017 5 лет назад
Wow, we're really digging deep, here! Never heard of this, but like it right away. It's a mechanical wonder! This seems like something that could be developed more, and would be rugged enough! Or could be. I mean, there's tempered glass, and all kinds of rugged optical stuff, even quartz and sapphire! It's easy to buy lenses now, wish I knew more about optics. This would be a fun thing for a machinist to work on.
@motionlessevent2528
@motionlessevent2528 2 года назад
I think if you where using a manual focus lense on your camera, you could set the focus to the far dot, or what is beyond it - that is likely to give a better view on what the sight is like.
@Face2theScr33n
@Face2theScr33n 4 года назад
It's probably the first thing people threw away, saying, "it looks like it came out of a cracker-jack box".
@TomBass411
@TomBass411 5 лет назад
Very beautiful weapon right there. Love SMLEs, wonder how the sight picture is on the range! Thanks Gun Jesus!
@5chr4pn3ll
@5chr4pn3ll 5 лет назад
"The British shipped them to Europe" lol
@alecnolastname4362
@alecnolastname4362 4 года назад
@widhbnw efDwdwDW Britain is an island separate of the 'mainland continents' like Japan. The British Empire most certainly did ship these across the isle to Europe. British/English interchangeable yes but travel north to Ireland Scotland or Wales and see just how well calling them English or British Goes...
@seanmckenna228
@seanmckenna228 4 года назад
Brexit
@theXEN0KID
@theXEN0KID 4 года назад
Valentine He clearly knows more than the other guy. I can tell you this because I am a brit
@Bialy_1
@Bialy_1 4 года назад
@@Beuwen_The_Dragon It looks that British sucks at geography... and have no idea what a continent is.
@kecukraftwork1988
@kecukraftwork1988 4 года назад
@@Bialy_1 Not at all: we know what a continent is, and we understand that, geographically, we are European. But that's a distant name for us. In order of preference, most of us tend to prefer to be identified by our country first, then British, and *then* European. It's hardly unreasonable.
@51WCDodge
@51WCDodge 5 лет назад
There were vesrsions of these sights around the early 1900's. Cost varied from cheap ones at about 1/6- One shilling and sixpence- or a days pay for a soldier in 1914. The expensive ones like these were about a weeks pay for a soldier.
@colnagocowboy
@colnagocowboy 5 лет назад
The guys at 9 hole did an accuracy test on a k31with optical sights the results were impressive
@Lpph96
@Lpph96 5 лет назад
Been waiting for this for some time - great stuff!
@ritterbruder212
@ritterbruder212 5 лет назад
Also known as the SMLE “Carbine” in BF1 lol
@Arthiem
@Arthiem 5 лет назад
the video-game crowd always pronounces it wrong too.
@thesturm8686
@thesturm8686 5 лет назад
@@Arthiem how to pronouce it correctly tho?, beside smelly that is
@Arthiem
@Arthiem 5 лет назад
@@thesturm8686 its "car-bean" because it's based off a French word "carabinier" who was a mounted solder who needed a shorter lighter rifle for use on horseback. Thank Napoleon for that one.
@thesturm8686
@thesturm8686 5 лет назад
@@Arthiem oh, i thought you were talking about SMLE. Now that you mention it, i have been pronouncing it wrong as "car bine", so, is carbine and dragoon rifle is a same thing?
@Arthiem
@Arthiem 5 лет назад
@@thesturm8686 yes. With Dragoon being the British word for it.
@astrataway7077
@astrataway7077 5 лет назад
Wow these are really really interesting I'd love to see this rifle in perfect working order and in action at a 500 plus yard range. I wonder what a modern equivalent would do or if there is any in target shooting circles
@scotty3114
@scotty3114 4 года назад
Something I've never seen or ever heard about before. Good job, Ian.
@zindreakim319
@zindreakim319 5 лет назад
Weird weapons but wonderful ... Thank you for your efforts to show us these wonderful weapons
@stephensmith4480
@stephensmith4480 5 лет назад
That was the first I have ever heard of these. Very interesting,thanks.
@nolanmcevoy2547
@nolanmcevoy2547 5 лет назад
I’ve been waiting for this since you made a mention of it on one of your Q&As
@Jayrod64
@Jayrod64 5 лет назад
This kind of interesting and informative content is exactly why I subscribed.
@SgtSteel1
@SgtSteel1 5 лет назад
Great stuff Ian.
@DeadBaron
@DeadBaron 5 лет назад
With modern manufacturing, it seems we could make cheap, modern versions for ARs and other rifles. 2.5x scopes are more efficient, but a couple lenses would be super affordable.
@RichWhiteUM
@RichWhiteUM 5 лет назад
With modern materials they may hold up better than the WWI variety and could be used in place of folding irons. You could have your standard red dot, but if something happened to it, you could switch to this. It would most likely improve the view area through the sights having the front sight moved back further on the rifle, which could be done on the AR much easier than it would have been on a SMLE. The issue of the sights getting dirty or scratched might still be enough of one to prevent these from wide spread military usage. It is an interesting "What If?" exercise, though.
@noahfyan9617
@noahfyan9617 5 лет назад
They do Iraqveteran8888 just did a video on some the other day
@vladislavshevchenko9970
@vladislavshevchenko9970 5 месяцев назад
There was another version mounted to the side of the iron sights, id prefer the side mounted optics to both telescopic and iron sights
@Ogrethephreak
@Ogrethephreak 4 года назад
Another good video, as always
@thumperpaul
@thumperpaul 4 года назад
Man, what a beautiful rifle. Looks factory fresh!
@robertwright3373
@robertwright3373 5 лет назад
Great video! I learned something completely new to me. Thank you!
@Taistelukalkkuna
@Taistelukalkkuna 5 лет назад
Gun Jesus taking look at the Galilean Sights. This is good. =D
@andersonsroad5161
@andersonsroad5161 5 лет назад
One possible explanation for the British armies lack of a dedicated sniper program at the start of the war was that it was taken as a given that ALL the soldiers in the infantry regiments of Britain's small peace time volunteer professional army could shoot and practice field craft to a very high standard and thus a stand alone program was not needed. (Unlike the war obsessed militaristic Hun whos army was made up of conscripts from the beginning. ) Then as the ranks in the British army were filled with conscripts with much lower standards of training a dedicated program was needed because there wasnt time or resources enough to bring everyone up to the prewar standard.
@brittakriep2938
@brittakriep2938 5 лет назад
Andersons Road : As a german i must ask, in which year do you live? In the last decades it had been the peace obsessed americans , often accompanied from their british poodles , who invaded countries without a declaration of war and without beeing attacked from this countries. Is it possible that the mighty ones of the english speaking countries like war, because they do not know, how it is, when enemy troops are in their country??
@andersonsroad5161
@andersonsroad5161 5 лет назад
@@brittakriep2938 My comments were about Germany of the 1WW and 2WW era. The shame of your nation and culture will last for eternity. Never before in the history of humanity has a sophisticated nation state carried out the atrocities that you grandparents and great grandparents did. Just keep manufacturing good cars and beer and keep a low profile. No ones interested in your revisionist bullshit hun.
@brittakriep2938
@brittakriep2938 5 лет назад
Andersons Road : I have no probllems with the history of my country, of course i am not happy about it. But it seems that many non german nations have a problem with the truth. But now i don' t want to throw more oil into the fire. Have a good time in your future life !
@jonmcentire
@jonmcentire 4 года назад
Ian, first off I love your videos, been watching for ages and find them really enjoyable. I have noticed through a number of your videos the difficulty you have had getting optical sights to focus in your camera. This is because you have your focal point set incorrectly to look down those sights. Those sights are designed to have the user focus at point out in front of the end of the sight (often well in the distance). In this video I noticed the focal point was set at some point in the middle of the rifle (right around the original iron sights). The next time you find yourself attempting to look down optical sights like this, manually put your focus at infinity and walk it back until you get the proper sight picture. Hope that helps!
@CraigLYoung
@CraigLYoung 5 лет назад
Thank you Mr. Collector!
@bobbyhood101
@bobbyhood101 5 лет назад
A example of the ability to use what you've got until something better comes along!
@LordOfThisWorld74
@LordOfThisWorld74 5 лет назад
Thanks Ian!! You're the man.
@mrvladimirputin9828
@mrvladimirputin9828 2 года назад
optics existed for long time even in ww1, my grandfather a us navy air man in the oss special forces stormed normandy with an eotech
@starga-fr7qx
@starga-fr7qx 3 года назад
Also worth noting, that at the time, target shooting at Bisley, was in fact just service rifles.. And Bisley and the NRA had been brought to life to train and maintain shooting skills for use in case of war, especially so since UK didn't have much of a standing army at the time. The entire site is still MOD owned at the moment, though managed by civilian NRA, it's a great place to be when the sun shines , the guns are shooting and then suddenly you see a lancaster with 2 spits and a 2 hurricanes fly over with about 8 roaring RR merlins...
@michaelfoye1135
@michaelfoye1135 4 года назад
Forgotten Weapons ,You might be able to use a pinhole adapter for your camera to allow you to collect better images of sight pictures. Hope that's helpful. Thank you for the excellent educational content.
@feudist
@feudist 4 года назад
This was featured in the excellent Netflix series Gallipoli
@williamhart4896
@williamhart4896 5 лет назад
Interesting optic first time I've heard of this type and thanks
@barlowmccarthy1295
@barlowmccarthy1295 3 года назад
I’ve wanted to see this for so long
@k.w.churchill4397
@k.w.churchill4397 3 года назад
Sounds like a fantastic idea ! Im surprised it was not used in great numbers !
@TheGearhead222
@TheGearhead222 5 лет назад
That is a great idea! Kinda reminds me of the 4X short scopes that Russians fitted to the Mosin-Nagant M91-30 so that their snipers could more accurately "snipe" targets at 1-200 yards:) More like a magnified aiming device than a scope, IMHO-John in Texas
@3X73RM
@3X73RM 3 года назад
This technology is still used today, but on compound bows. One sight with a lens on the riser above the bow hand and one tiny lens mounted inside a small peep sight on the string. So when you draw the bow string the peep sight is right in front of your eye.
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