Transparent front sights
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Transparent front sights
Hi all,
has anybody tried out a transparent colored front sight yet? I saw them being offered in red, yellow and green. I am curious about your experiences, if any.
Robert
has anybody tried out a transparent colored front sight yet? I saw them being offered in red, yellow and green. I am curious about your experiences, if any.
Robert
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I think the point David was making was that if they actually were good and did anything then you'd see top shooters using them or the other thing would be the ISSF would ban them. As neither of those things are true, you can make your own decision. They may be beneficial to someone that has a specific eye problem but I don't thing they will help normal shooters shoot better scores.
- john bickar
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We are effectively talking about the same thing although the ones I used had a thin stripe of the original black metal sight at each side.Funny Farmer wrote:We may be talking of different types. I mean the front sights that are made of a single block of colored glass. Not the fibre glass insert that creates a small dot.If we're talking about the same thing, a translucent insert in a vertical slot in the front sight,
My days of thinking that all of these "toys" will help are long gone. Provided that I don't get mind-drift then my biggest problem is holding the gun still; and that's purely down to lack of work.
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I did not find a picture on the Internet so I did a quick drawing. The bottom is a metal plate or frame that screws to the base like a normal front sight. The sight itself is made of glass, the rear edge is slanted a bit. They are made for various models of match APs (Steyr LPs, Anschütz etc.) and in different colors such as red, yellow and I also saw one in clear glass once.
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I always see the target "defocused, blurry". That's a side effect of looking at the sights.scerir wrote:This way one could see the target defocused, blurry.
If you can see the target through the material of the sights then I would class them as "optical", and therefore not allowed.scerir wrote:But I do not know if such a front sight would be ISSF 'legal'.....
That's correct. But hypermetropic eyes, often, when focused on the front sight are also focused on the target (that is to say, they cannot see the target blurry enough).David Levene wrote: I always see the target "defocused, blurry". That's a side effect of looking at the sights.
That's possible. "Only open sights are allowed. Optical, mirror, telescope, laserbeam, electronically projected dot sights etc., are prohibited."David Levene wrote: If you can see the target through the material of the sights then I would class them as "optical", and therefore not allowed.