Hard to justify tho, as I also do not want to drill and tap mine.
Got pictures of the rear sight mount? I might have a no drill option
Hard to justify tho, as I also do not want to drill and tap mine.
Is anyone else more and more liking red dots on their long guns. I've suddenly noticed I've gotten rather a few.
That looks like a Rigby peep on the back of that bolt. I would be using that were it mine, as long as it was accurate.
I have about 20 rifles/carbines mounted with red dots, they sure make hits simpler and faster than using irons, especially if your eyes are a bit older.
Reflex sight on a bolt may seem weird but it is basically the best peep sight ever. The dhield rds is very small, super tough, and fits on a receiver ring with ease. They stood up to military use on long guns, and when I emailed shield to ask if they could handle 458 wm recoil they basically laughed at me while saying absolutely.
I know it does not fit with the tactical communities beliefs on field of view, but I like putting them further back, really comes to eye well when shouldered and is very similar to using a receiver sight.
We used to shoot a silhouette pig we had dragged to 500 yards with a 2 moa sight. Just like irons if you visualize and have a consistent hold you can shoot groups smaller than your dot size.
A ~1oz shield sight on their qd weaver/pic mount may be the best "backup irons" in the game.
I've heard concerns about this style of sight not working in the rain but never experienced them.
I'd like to try the holosun chevron reticule dot sight.
If you have astigmatism green dots, adjustable intensity and glasses lenses with the computer glare coating help a ton
I haven't tried one on a shotgun, but for anything that is not wing shooting I can see it would work well. I also haven't used one for hunting yet, but that is because I hunt mostly more open prairie and need magnification optics for the longer shots. For closer range hunting inside 150yds or so I would happily use a red dot on my rifle.
I, too, like good iron sights. But the big advantage the RDS has for hunting is low light visibility. I have had plenty of shots taken early/late when the light was simply not good enough to be able to shoot with iron sights.
This is also my issue. While I really like irons, as I get older they work less and less well for my eyes.
Mark
Reflex sight on a bolt may seem weird but it is basically the best peep sight ever. The dhield rds is very small, super tough, and fits on a receiver ring with ease. They stood up to military use on long guns, and when I emailed shield to ask if they could handle 458 wm recoil they basically laughed at me while saying absolutely.
I know it does not fit with the tactical communities beliefs on field of view, but I like putting them further back, really comes to eye well when shouldered and is very similar to using a receiver sight.
We used to shoot a silhouette pig we had dragged to 500 yards with a 2 moa sight. Just like irons if you visualize and have a consistent hold you can shoot groups smaller than your dot size.
A ~1oz shield sight on their qd weaver/pic mount may be the best "backup irons" in the game.
I've heard concerns about this style of sight not working in the rain but never experienced them.
I'd like to try the holosun chevron reticule dot sight.
If you have astigmatism green dots, adjustable intensity and glasses lenses with the computer glare coating help a ton
I do not like red dots with no magnification on rifles. I used to shoot irons to 500, but that was when I was much younger. I find straight red dots imprecise at rifle ranges, say past 50 yds. That said, I really like 1-4 or 8 scopes with an illuminated Center dot. Best of both worlds to me. I am not a fan of complicated reticles in LVPOs. I am not working on a death squad so human sized reticle are not applicable for me.




























