I have a couple of original big bore rifles and they shoot very high at 100 yards. I know originally military rifles and handguns were meant to be high with the idea of hold on his belt and hit the enemy mid body.
What do you guys do to get these things hitting on at 100 yards? There must be an adaptor for the front sight or something like that. I don't want to modify the sights from original or vary the load from original a lot. I am thinking of building some sort of slip over front sight that maybe tightens with a set screw to the original front sight underneath or something like this. Any ideas.
I have an original Remington rolling block in .50/70 and an original Sharps Brochardt in .45/70. Both shoot well but very high. They have identical front sights with are low sweated on bases with brass blades in them. They are not dovetailed at all, so not easily changed. Both rifles shoot excellent groups and work on long range silhouettes and paper, but I would like to get a 100 yard zero.
This is also true of some original military 1800s handguns I own and shoot. My .44 1858 Remington and my 1871 Remington in .50 US Army both do exactly the same thing. They shoot very well and I enjoy them, but I would like to come up with a way to have them shoot to sights at 100 yards without my having to modify the original sights on my antique guns.
Ideas guys? I am sure others are facing the same issues.
What do you guys do to get these things hitting on at 100 yards? There must be an adaptor for the front sight or something like that. I don't want to modify the sights from original or vary the load from original a lot. I am thinking of building some sort of slip over front sight that maybe tightens with a set screw to the original front sight underneath or something like this. Any ideas.
I have an original Remington rolling block in .50/70 and an original Sharps Brochardt in .45/70. Both shoot well but very high. They have identical front sights with are low sweated on bases with brass blades in them. They are not dovetailed at all, so not easily changed. Both rifles shoot excellent groups and work on long range silhouettes and paper, but I would like to get a 100 yard zero.
This is also true of some original military 1800s handguns I own and shoot. My .44 1858 Remington and my 1871 Remington in .50 US Army both do exactly the same thing. They shoot very well and I enjoy them, but I would like to come up with a way to have them shoot to sights at 100 yards without my having to modify the original sights on my antique guns.
Ideas guys? I am sure others are facing the same issues.





















































