Man killer sights ? ?
my friend has an older lee enfield that he uses for deer hunting. one night at the camp we got into a discusion about how it would always either hit high or low, but never to the left or right. an older man told us something that got me thinking. the gun has the origional military peep sights. if youv shot one of these you know the front sight is simply a stick that makes an upside down T within the circle. the man explained to us that the purpose of this design is to take aim on a human body as they are military rifles. the body of a human is vertical or straight up and down while the body of a deer is horizontal. made sense to me. does anybody have any tips or insight on how to compensate for this "mankiller" sight?
You can compensite for this "mankiller" sight by learning to shoot properly, and by not believeing a lot of the B.S. and myths you read or hear.
When you use open V type sights, you have three things to line up....the target, the front sight, and the rear V sight. The eye can focus on one of these sharply, and the other two are a bit out of focus.
With an aperture rear sight (the one with the hole in it), your eye looks through the hole and automatically centers on the hole, so you have only two things to concentrate on, the front sight and the target. You must properly adjust the sights for YOUR eyes and method of holding on target.
There are two positions that you can use to hold the front sight on. A center hold positions the TIP of the front sight in the center of the target such as a bulls eye target. The other way is to zero the rifle so that you hold just below the bulls eye target again with the TIP of the front sight, so that you sort of balance the bulls eye on top of the front sight.
In both cases, the actual aiming point is the TIP or TOP of the front sight post.
A deer is about 18 inches high in the body, while a man is over twice that. Because bullets drop when fired, if your aim is not correct, or your sights have been set wrong, there is a better chance to hit a human target at longer or unknown ranges than a Deer as there is less margin of error.
It should be obvious that if the rifle is sighted to hit correctly at 100 yards, then a target at 500 yards would not be hit, as the bullet would strike in front of it. That is why rear sights can be elevated and are marked at different ranges, so that they can be adjusted so that the bullet strikes the target at longer ranges.
But it is a good story.
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