Tip of the day...

Mount Sweetness

CGN Ultra frequent flyer
Rating - 100%
182   0   0
Location
Southern Ontario
When you get your iron sights shooting less than an inch from your target at 100 yards (windage - left to right).....for the love of God, The Pope and Baby Jesus.....let it be, leave them alone before you chase your tail, get an ulcer, lose sleep and blow 3 boxes...
 
When you get your iron sights shooting less than an inch from your target at 100 yards (windage - left to right).....for the love of God, The Pope and Baby Jesus.....let it be, leave them alone before you chase your tail, get an ulcer, lose sleep and blow 3 boxes...

Good idea, especially when one thinks it out. With iron sights we are of course, using our naked eyes. A normal, meaning top quality, human eye can only see as small as one inch at a hundred yards! Therefore, how can we align our iron sights to points smaller than we can see?
Top quality match rifle sights are different. They use, or can use, an aperature on both front and rear of the rifle. They align these sights on a round, black bullseye, of maybe 5 or 6 inches across, on a white background. The front aperature covers this bullseye with a white ring around it of maybe 2 or three inches. A human eye actually can keep that white ring even on all sides, to tolerances of less than an inch. Thus, the iron sights can be adjusted to less than an inch at 100 yards.
Here also, is some counter tips on adjusting iron sights. Adjusting the sights after only one shot, can indeed, result in a lot of chasing the bullet holes. However, if the shot is 4 inches low, adjust your sights just 2 inches up, and shoot again. In other words, adjust the sights just half as much as the one shot shows what you need. This will get you on target with less shooting.
However, I am away ahead of myself here. The above applies to a good aperature rear sight, with about ½ inch click vernier adjustments.
If by "iron sights," you mean the type that come on a 94 Winchester or a standard sighted Marlin, that is a striped horse of different colors. The sideways adjustments are done by tapping the front sight a bit this way or that. Elevation will either be in fairly large jumps up the ladder, or taking out the ladder and filing down the notch that is just too high.
Try to end up hitting that traditional 8 inch pie plate.
 
Heh, heh! I must confess to what might well be a mental illness ..... if the holes are 1" off center at 100 yards, I ain't happy until they group within 1/2" of centre. The price I pay is hours of range time, large quantities of bullets, and the frustration of trying the move that durn iron sight a minute fraction of an inch. Usually, when the sight actually moves, it is too far the other direction .... and so it goes until I accidentally get the sight more or less bang on. Yep, I know I should go for counseling, but I don't have time because I still have several iron sighted old Winchesters to sight in.:rolleyes:
 
When your wife asks for something that'll go from 0 to 180 in 4 seconds flat.......DON'T give her a BATHROOM SCALE!!...and push that sight juuuuust a little left.....orrr, is that right??...ahhhhh heck, SHOOT AGAIN!!
 
Well Kirk,
here's a tip for you. If you are that close to bullzeye, figure out which way you need to move
the front sight and file a bit of the side off the front sight t'other side.
It sounds like it would work?????

Jest mess'in with ya.
At least you're getting range time.
 
Back
Top Bottom