Boomer said:
So now we come around to the original premise - is the front sight and target in focus at the same time? Can-down at least has taken the initiative to pull out a rifle and try it, and seems to think that if there is a difference between the sharpness of his front sight and target he is unable to detect it. Perhaps that is the situation for me as well, but then that is my reality - my front sight and target are in simultaneous focus.
Boomer, perhaps you should read Can-down's post:"I
don't know if both are in perfect focus but I can see that post and the target much clearer when looking through a
NARROW aperature." Nobody's been arguing what small apertures do Boomer, or maybe you missed that. We're talking about ghost rings here.
As far as your "initiative" comment, you're acting pretty presumtive - I've been doing it all along, as have others - maybe if
you would take the initiative to speak with a opthomologist or optometrist? But I think we all know by now that you won't.
Boomer said:
If using a peep sight produces a greater depth of field that a ghost ring, then a ghost ring must produce a greater depth of field than normal vision. Perhaps this helps explain why my front sight and target are both in focus - despite opinions to the contrary. I know that the target would not be in focus if I was aiming with with open sights.
Yes, a ghost ring aperture will provide sharper focus/deeper depth of field than traditional open sights, just as a small aperture will do that much more so than a ghost ring. Or maybe, just maybe, you are mid-ranging, ie. focusing on an area somewhere between both objects, and each are therefore equally in focus, but niether
exactly in focus; or are unable to discern the difference in focus; they can be very close, but two objects at different distances will not be "in focus", ie.
exact focus.
Boomer said:
jaycee - In the light conditions I have described, you might be able to tell the difference between a seal at 30 yards and one at 200, but you would be hard pressed to tell if the seal at 30 yards was at 30 or 100 yards. You cannot determine the difference between a seal at 100 yards and one at 300 yards in the light conditions I have described, without knowing the relative size of the seals in question - and there can be huge differences in size. Without the aid of technology (such as your very handy Barr and Stroud) or without the normal indexes we use to judge distance, we are lost.
Boomer, I'm not arguing that unaided rangefinding on ice, and especially with flat light it very difficult and approximate at best.
Boomer said:
You might of hung around up here for a while, but unless you've been out on the sea ice in flat light you have no clue what I am talking about. The tundra is easier, although at times not much, because there are willows, grass and rocks to aid in our depth perception. On the sea ice in flat light, without colored glasses you cannot focus on the ground directly in front of you, you cannot see drifts, and you cannot see pressure ridges, unless there is enough light that they appear green. Ranging an animal or object of unknown size under these conditions is all but impossible. You know that your front sight is 30" from you eye, but if you don't think about that, it could be a dark post hundreds of yards away as far as you eye is concerned. If you observed a dark post hundreds of yards away and laid your front sight beside it, and both appeared to be the same size as you aimed through your ghost ring, each one would be in focus.
I've been on a lot of sea ice, from Puuvungnutuk (sp?) to Grise Fiord and points in between, and again I'm not arguing that it's difficult to range, much less see things (like drifts and pressure ridges) on ice in flat light. But if you can't tell the difference in focus of your front sight and a similar sized post hundreds of yards away, you are probably either mid-ranging or your vision isn't accute enough to tell the difference.
Boomer said:
Now, if we return to normal light conditions, and the topography gives us a 3 dimensional view, should we encounter a similar arrangement with a target post alongside your front sight, the front sight and the post will still appear in focus.
See comment above....
Boomer, in all seriouseness, speak with either an optometrist or opthomologist. Since we've started this sparring match, I've spoken with 2 optomotrists and one opthomologist. Suffice to say, you wouldn't like their answers.
I don't know where you're located, but if you don't have a regular optometrist in town, there's probably one that runs a fly-in satellite office in town.
So how about it, willing to speak to one?