Machining M14 front sight post

Wally

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hey,
I find the M14 front sight post WAY too wide. it seems to cover everything up, even at 100yds. I'm thinkin about pulling it off and milling the corners into a point.... maybe leave a flat strip around .020"-.050" wide or something...

Any thoughts? Anyone else done this?
 
Forget making it into a point. However, milling 5 thou off both sides will give you a National Match width front sight. It should be 62 thou wide after milling. 20 thou is too thin.
Mind you, the sights are designed for a 6 o'clock hold. Aim to have the black sitting on top of the front sight and adjust the rear.
 
I narrowed one with a file and it worked well. Keep the top and sides flat. Slope all surfaces slightly away from the rear sight to avoid side or top glare. Touched up afterwards with Birchwood Casey Super Blue and it looked good. Put some tape on the wings to prevent marking them up with the file.
 
Forget making it into a point.
Wasn't going to make a point, I was gonna do this:
sightpost.jpg


What's wrong with that?
However, milling 5 thou off both sides will give you a National Match width front sight. It should be 62 thou wide after milling. 20 thou is too thin.
Mind you, the sights are designed for a 6 o'clock hold. Aim to have the black sitting on top of the front sight and adjust the rear.
6 0'clock hold?
 
6 0'clock hold?

Like a handgun, think of a pumpkin on a post.

Examples Below:

Open_sight_pictures.png



From Westernrifleshooters

The six o'clock hold gives beginners (and especially not-so-newcomers) a big advantage, in that it forces shooters to concentrate on the front sight post so that they can be sure that the target is just perched on the front post. That's where a more colorful name for the six o'clock hold - "pumpkin on a post"- started.

The key point to remember is that the human eye simply cannot focus with equal clarity on three distinct items located at varying distances from the eye - in other words, the rear sight, the front sight post, and the target itself. That issue being a fact of human biomechanics, the shooter must choose one item and let the others blur to a greater or lesser degree.

Which to choose?

Always choose the front sight post to be clear. It will be hard to discipline yourself at first - you and your eyes will want to try to focus on all three objects, or the target, or the rear sight, all at the same time. Take a deep breath and concentrate only on the front sight, and making sure that as you begin your trigger squeeze, that sharp front sight post stays right there, at the six o'clock position of the round (but somewhat fuzzy) bullseye target.

Say to yourself: "Sharp front sight, pumpkin on a post. Sharp front sight, pumpkin on a post."

Keep repeating that mantra, while allowing yourself only enough attention to the rear sight to ensure that your front post is still centered and on the same level as the "ears".

Do that on every shot, and you'll be a superstar. Promise!
 
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Like a handgun, think of a pumpkin on a post.

Examples Below:

Open_sight_pictures.png

gotcha..... so I don't see a problem with thinning the post.... means that there isn't so much guesstimation about where the center of the post is. And yeah, I usually set my open sights up for a 6 O'clock hold
 
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