iron sight question

danastles

CGN Regular
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quick question, trying to save some ammo and just get a rough idea.
when using iron sights, such as the one below, which notch would be the setting for 100yrds? im not much of an open sights guy but after last years hunt, thats all im using. any help would be great !
dan
IMG_1413.jpg
 
There's no way of predicting where the sight needs to be adjusted to. As was said ,adjust it until your point of impact falls on your point of aim at 100.
 
To save a lot of ammunition, by all means bore sight it. I do it in my basement. If you have about thirty feet of space, you're home free.
Get the rifle in soething that holds it, even a cardboard box with notches, will do.
I have a bullseye target with colored rings that I pinned on the drier. Keep adjusting the rifle until looking through the barrel, it lines up perfectly on the target. Then ease your eye up and look through the sights. Adjust the sights until they are about half inch over the centre of the bullseye.
With scope sights I got within 4 inches, first shot at 100 yards. With a 22 I was almost dead on at 25.
 
A factory chooses a front sight height and a rear sight that are compatible. That is, the rear sight has enough adjustment in it to zero the rifle.

Because of many different tolerances, including the shooter and his ammo of choice, each rifle has to be zeroed. H4831 made a good suggestion. Boresight the rifle at home, so that your first shot at the range is on paper.

I do it in the living room, looking out the window of the house. (I live on a farm. You might be better off looking out a window at the back of your house.) If you boresight the rifle to be on target (bore and sights on the target) at 25 to 30 yards, you will be on paper at 100.

When I take an un-zeroed rifle to the range, I don't start shooting at 100. My first shot is at 25 yards. I make a rough adjustment for wind and elevation (elevation should have the bullet in the center of the aiming mark) and then fire a shot at 50 yards. Bullet should be zero for wind and close for elevation. Then I fire shot at 100, make an adjustment and let barrel cool.

For the rear sight, raising the rear raises the bullets. For the front sight (wind adjustment) move the sight the opposite direction you want the bulllets to go. Take something to the range with you to move the front sight.

A rule of thumb I use. The close range zero of a rifle is the bullet velocity plus 1. That is, a 2500 fps bullet will zero at 26 yards. A 3000 fps bullet will zero at 31 yards.

This works with low mounted sights. Won't work for an AR-15.
 
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