ninepointer
CGN frequent flyer
- Location
- Central Ontario
Since I'm installing a scope on my 10/22, I had to remove the Williams receiver sight that was installed a few years ago by a pro gunsmith. First thing I notice is that the front screw on the receiver sight turns very easy, has lots of crud on it (loctite?) and does not back off, it just turns. "Oh well, must have loosened up, hope I didn't snap it!", I say to myself.
The rear screw is in tightly and backs off as I would expect. So I remove the sight and notice that the front screw does not extend through the body of the sight into the receiver. It turns out that the front screw is actually a shorter and smaller diameter screw that was epoxied or loctited into the hole in the sight as a dummy screw
Why you ask? Because what the gunsmith did was align the rear screw on the sight with the forward hole in the receiver. In other words, there was no hole in the reciever under the dummy screw. The receiver sight was only held onto the gun with one screw, the rear one
Oh yeah, there was also lots of red crud smeared under the sight, so I guess he glued it with some red loctite for good measure
So I wonder, "Why would the gunsmith do that when then are 2 screw holes in the sight and 2 screw holes in the receiver that are supposed to match up?" So I line up the holes as they are supposed to be, but I see that the sight no longer matches the contour of the receiver! WTF?! I found the answer when I spotted the model number on the underside of the sight. The gunsmith had installed the Williams sight that is made for a Ruger 44 and not the one that is made for the 10/22. According to the Williams website, these sights look similar but are NOT interchangable. Instead of re-ordering for me the correct sight, I guess the gunsmith went ahead and did a make-fit job using the wrong sight
Sure, I could have originally bought and installed the sight myself (its not rocket science), but I didn't mind giving this gunsmith work because I always liked this guy. I'm dissappointed
This is the kind of job that I might expect from Bubba in his basement, but not from a pro
The rear screw is in tightly and backs off as I would expect. So I remove the sight and notice that the front screw does not extend through the body of the sight into the receiver. It turns out that the front screw is actually a shorter and smaller diameter screw that was epoxied or loctited into the hole in the sight as a dummy screw
So I wonder, "Why would the gunsmith do that when then are 2 screw holes in the sight and 2 screw holes in the receiver that are supposed to match up?" So I line up the holes as they are supposed to be, but I see that the sight no longer matches the contour of the receiver! WTF?! I found the answer when I spotted the model number on the underside of the sight. The gunsmith had installed the Williams sight that is made for a Ruger 44 and not the one that is made for the 10/22. According to the Williams website, these sights look similar but are NOT interchangable. Instead of re-ordering for me the correct sight, I guess the gunsmith went ahead and did a make-fit job using the wrong sight
Sure, I could have originally bought and installed the sight myself (its not rocket science), but I didn't mind giving this gunsmith work because I always liked this guy. I'm dissappointed