seeing targets
Very well said smellie!
Coming back on topic, I have to ask...how does one see a target at 600 metres, with iron sights?
By using one's eyes, one looks through the rear mounted peep sight, tries to bring the foresight into a modicum of focus, and aligns the top of the foresight with the bottom of the black bulls eye on the target. Of course, one has to set the proper sighting arrangement for elevation and windage, taking into account the quirks of nature, such as wind speed, direction, elevation of the shooter, elevation of the target, time of day and light conditions, angle of the sun, and it's direction on the target, humidity, the characteristics of the particular lot of ammunition used, ( and possibly the rotation of the earth.

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Assuming one has a stable firing position, and is capable of holding the rifle so that the foresight is on the target MOST of the time, then the proper application of pressure to the trigger has a high percentage factor in achieveing a hit on the target.
At 1000 or 1200 yards, it is even more interesting.
Also, the targets are bigger at longer ranges. One of the things with shooters now is the inability to fathom just what we regularly used to do with equipment like the Lee Enfield, Ross, and P-14 on a military range. What we are talking about here is SERVICE RIFLE competition, and it was a test of what that rifle and ammunition would do in the hands of a skilled rifleman.
A case in point is the almost total lack of open sights on available hunting rifles today. If your scope fouls up, your hunting is over until you either repair it or get a new scope mounted on the rifle. With a set of open sights, you have a back up option for out to an easy 200 yards on a game animal.
I had to laugh at one of our Canadian Hunting TV Shows where the host came to Manitoba, and when he got to camp, found up his scope had been dropped. And no spare back-up scope in his luggage. He then had to use a bow and arrow, and a large Moose walked by him at about 80 yards, well within open sight range, but well out of arrow range. He was using a modern, magnum rifle, and it had no open sights on it, and it was sitting useless in camp, because of no alternate sights or at least a spare rifle scope. Imagine the average hunter going thousands of miles, spending thousands of dollars, and failing to take the simplest of precautions. I would not be surprised if he had shipped ALL his ammunition in one case, instead of distributing it over two or three cases in case of a missing piece of baggage.....gone with all your ammo. Oh, well, you could always make a spear!
No, we saw the targets, and we shot at them. We were limited by our equipment, compared to today's shooter. But, you also have to remember that we old farts developed the sport, and you younger guys are benefitting from our knowledge, experience, tests, and experiments.
What is going to happen 40 years from now, when TODAY will be the GOOD OLD DAYS to the present generation?
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