75 shooters, I'm curious about the let in 'slots' on the fore end. Decorative or functional?
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Decorative."Nueces"75 shooters, I'm curious about the let in 'slots' on the fore end. Decorative or functional?
YES !!"Nueces"Ziabeam, I know just about nothing of these diopter and globe sights. And of course I have them on my new 350. When I look through my rear Williams I'm seeing my front globe with a ring of daylight around ( outside ) it. Should this not be the case? I mean, should I just be seeing my globe and its insert alone? In other words do I need a smaller aperture?
Trade ya !!"JoeWayneRhea"No doubt !!
Now I see why everyone can tell mine has been refinished. I like the flat satin look . Ziabeam that thing has a super nice piece of wood on it
Jonnes those are excellent examples !!"Jonnes"They're not cheap, but I use an adjustable rear sight iris and front sight. These things will set you back around $200 to $400. But they will improve your accuracy, as @Ziabeam explained. Especially when you shoot multiple disciplines like I do (10, 12 and 50 meters).
Spot on !!"Jonnes"... when you ever want to go pro, get a front sight that allows for canting correction on your front sight. ...remember, canting will cause a change of point of impact! Something a lot of people don't take in consideration.![]()
"Ziabeam"
Spot on !!"Jonnes"... when you ever want to go pro, get a front sight that allows for canting correction on your front sight. ...remember, canting will cause a change of point of impact! Something a lot of people don't take in consideration.![]()
Do you find that the change is exponential as range increases?
No, good question! The rear sight (diopter) is adjustable for windage and elevation, so you can compensate. Even a Williams sight has those features. Only for 10-meter match rifles you need smaller click ratios. Depending on the diopter, 1 click is 0,1 to 0,5mm at 10 meters. The more expensive the diopter (in general), the more accurate it is. You can buy one for $50 or $500, the more expensive, the lower the click ratio. And if your sights can't be aligned, you can buy risers that will raise your front sight or diopter, depending on where you need the additional space."Nueces"Nuther question. I am concerned over how to determine the height of any new sights I acquire. Given the construction of this gun. The receiver is some given elevation and the barrel another. I am assuming my front and rear sights need to be the same elevation. Right now they put a front globe on this gun with a 1 centimeter tall base. It works with the Williams FP TG PK Aperture Sight. I assume any new sights I might get need to match up. Right?
I will go to the Williams sight and see if an adjustable iris can git on my Williams. Anybody know?
I got Champions Choice on the phone and they didn't think they could help me with my front globe due to the size of the dovetail cut into the 350. It is .314 thousands, or 8 mm. About 5/16 inch. Were they correct?"Jonnes"
No, good question! The rear sight (diopter) is adjustable for windage and elevation, so you can compensate. Even a Williams sight has those features. Only for 10-meter match rifles you need smaller click ratios. Depending on the diopter, 1 click is 0,1 to 0,5mm at 10 meters. The more expensive the diopter (in general), the more accurate it is. You can buy one for $50 or $500, the more expensive, the more accurate it is. And if that's not enough, you can buy risers that will raise your front sight or diopter, depending on your need."Nueces"Nuther question. I am concerned over how to determine the height of any new sights I acquire. Given the construction of this gun. The receiver is some given elevation and the barrel another. I am assuming my front and rear sights need to be the same elevation. Right now they put a front globe on this gun with a 1 centimeter tall base. It works with the Williams FP TG PK Aperture Sight. I assume any new sights I might get need to match up. Right?
I will go to the Williams sight and see if an adjustable iris can git on my Williams. Anybody know?