fed007 said:
perfect, thx Kampfhamster - I was wondering about that brass rod - I was concerned it would scratch the barrel - I am not sure about how to wrap patch where I can pull it back through the barrel ... also do you plunge the barrel starting form the barrel end or chamber end?
don't worry, you won't damage the barrel, the steel is way too hard for that. After all, it's a cold forged barrel
Start from the chamber end, otherwise you might push all the dirt right into your chamber, where it's difficult to get out.
about the sights.
so when your drum is turned to the battle sights your irons line up satifactory with your red dot ? ( does your red dot provide parallax error correction? )
What do you use as "battle sight"? On have removed the screw on the "400m" position for a better field of view and use this as the battle sights. Otherwise the 200m-sight is "our" battle sight", the 100m-position is used for night shooting only.
As far as I know the Aimpoint ML2 is parallax-free, at least that's what the manual says.
I can see the iron sights just fine with the aimpoint mounted, will take pictures when I'm on the range next time.
About the irons, the manual states the screw at the back is WINDAGE and the big screw on the side is elevation.
this website
http://www.mg-42.net/sight_adj_sig.htm says opposite of the manual.
The manual is wrong then.
I shot it yesterday (had to

) and every thing I shot (about 50 yards was low and left - by a fair amount) - turns out I had the night sight flipped up the whole time and I may have been turning the wrong screw, no wonder I was having trouble sighting in.
I expect the manual is correct and that the rear screw is windage, to reset my whole sighting procedure should I center the rear windage and adjust the front site first? Then start fine tuning?
fed007
Centering the windage won't do probably since the rifles are supposed to be shot in at the factory, so they were maybe not in the center when you got it.
If I were you I'd just place a target at 30m and give it a try, can't be that bad I guess.
In the army we first sight them in at 30m, then your sight is also good (more or less) for 300m (the bullet crosses the line of sight twice, once at 30m and once at 300m, but I'm afraid I can't explain it any further. It works though.
by the way: congratulation to your new rifle
