bpjack wrote on Oct 30
th, 2018 at 4:10pm:
Thanks John
Any thoughts on using something other than steel?
Delrin maybe. Brass?
Jack
Jack,
Back when Parson's was making the Long Scope, and the Super Targetspot repro, black delrin was used for both the micrometer knob buttons and the opposing plungers in the 4-point and 3-point mounts.
Frank and Wayne,
The Centennial Journal by Lyman is a good source of info about this. Strobel's later scope book duplicates a lot of the Lyman Centennial info.
Way too much to type here, but some highlights are...
5A and 438:
Lyman 5A scope first sold in Feb, 1929
Lyman 438 scope first appeared in Lyman catalog No. 18 published in 1930
Originally scope bases and mounts were interchangeable for the 5A and 438 scopes
Early rear mount had the plunger opposing the horizontal micrometer knob, and the "grasshopper" spring opposing the vertical.
The 4-point rear mount (shown in Frank's photo) with the bottom plunger opposing the vertical micrometer knob, first shown in catalog No. 21, had taken place by 1932.
Early clicks were 1/2 minute, by 1933 the rear mount had 1/4 minute clicks (using the 7.2" base spacing). This mount was discontinued by 1938, when a new 3-point mount was developed.
Targetspot, Jr, and Super:
Targetspot introduced in Lyman catalog No. 22 published in 1934, using a 4-point mount with 1/4 minute clicks.
Jr and Super introduced in Lyman catalog No. 25 published in 1937, using the new 3-point mount with 1/4 minute clicks.
Some people preferred the earlier 4-point to the newer 3-point, so the earlier 4-point wasn't discontinued until 1949.
Note that Lyman wrote that the 4-point mount that was used with the 5A and 438 was discontinued in 1938, 11 years
before the 4-point mount used with the Targetspot series was discontinued.
There's been a lot of mount (and mount parts) swapping going on from scope to scope since then.