Its too bad this thread is going the way it is. We could all have simply enjoyed talking about our new guns. Im done with it.
Im not %100 sure, but im PRETTY sure its because the number associated with the aperatures is NOT the yardage they are to be used... its a measurement relating to the size of the aperture or the field of view you get with that aperture. Again, not %100 sure about this but I thought I did read it somewhere and it would make perfect sense. Chinese do things differently.
Im not %100 sure, but im PRETTY sure its because the number associated with the aperatures is NOT the yardage they are to be used... its a measurement relating to the size of the aperture or the field of view you get with that aperture. Again, not %100 sure about this but I thought I did read it somewhere and it would make perfect sense. Chinese do things differently.
^^ He he, GLOCK of the BULLPUPS!^^
No sense reading the manual, they used google translate for it.
Makes for good toilet seat reading chuckles though.
Im not %100 sure, but im PRETTY sure its because the number associated with the aperatures is NOT the yardage they are to be used... its a measurement relating to the size of the aperture or the field of view you get with that aperture. Again, not %100 sure about this but I thought I did read it somewhere and it would make perfect sense. Chinese do things differently.
That is correct. The doctrine/design is meant for the ease of use under low light conditions. Increasing the rear aperture size allows easier shooting at a longer range, and the numbers correspond to the distance one wishes to engage the target.
100m - 1mm
300m - 2mm
500m - 2.2mm
Use the 100m aperture for 100m military qualifications.
However soldiers are advised to use the 500m aperture for CQB, with a lower torso hold for general combat.
I still think the T97 is a piece of crap.
Beyond the ugliness and that it's Chinese built it just burns me that I couldn't shoot one because I'm left handed.
If it was lefty friendly I may have actually considered it.
That is correct. The doctrine/design is meant for the ease of use under low light conditions. Increasing the rear aperture size allows easier shooting at a longer range, and the numbers correspond to the distance one wishes to engage the target.
100m - 1mm
300m - 2mm
500m - 2.2mm
Use the 100m aperture for 100m military qualifications.
However soldiers are advised to use the 500m aperture for CQB, with a lower torso hold for general combat.
Now are the sights calibrated for the distances mentioned a la Swiss arms? I'll try zeroing at 25m on the 300m aperture and see if the 100m aperture is ballpark at 100m
Thanks for posting! You have no idea how much that was bugging me! If you have any more information in this area, please post. I don't suppose you have a cousin over there that can get us the front rail system?![]()
This should work well. Please report back if using the 300m aperture works as a 25m battle sight zero. Then verify zero at 100m with 100m aperture.
I have sourced somebody who has info on the front clamp rail system. Apparently they were an one off manufactured by someone from Hong Kong for a local special police unit in China, and are not a general issue item. Very limited in the wild and are fetching big dollars for collectors. Unit price is not cheap, so it will be better off for somebody here to come up with our own version, or ask somebody in China to clone it.



























