A first follow-up on my posting 5 days ago regarding my newly-made extended front sight:
- I found there was no easy way to fit the pistol into the Pardini case with the foresight extended to 28mm beyond the front of the aluminum shroud, so I pulled it back to 25mm; no great difference and it fits in safely now.
- I finally received glass lenses for my new Olympic Champion shooting frame the other day, one cut for focus at 10metres as I've been aiming that way for several months, and the other focused on the front sight in case I decide to go back to that. So this is an added variable, this past week as I've tried both back and forth a bit in trying to decide which way to shoot for the next competiton. In the end, this morning I decided to stick with 10metre focus. While I haven't tried the shorter focus lens with normal or sub-normal sight radius, it quickly became obvious that focus on the front sight was far, far too wobbly for my tastes (the reason I stopped doing it in the first place) and was causing much more 'chicken-finger' than usual. This afternoon I shot a bunch of un-counted pellets (turned out to be 29, as I stopped before making myself too tired to shoot at my weekly club outing tonight) with the 10metre lens.
- Below are two targets put together for comparison in a simple animation. One was 38 shots fired in fairly rapid succession on one target, on a day when I felt really good, everything clicking along, good sense of stability. The second was this afternoon, the 29 shots, and I've been feeling rather more shaky than usual today, finding it impossible to settle in properly and watching my hand wobble quite a lot while trying to hold. I had to try and keep my holds below 3 seconds or the shaking would take shots out to the 6 or lower, as evidenced by the several hits in the 7 and 8 rings.
My sense is that today's target is better, with more 10's and slightly better outside 9's. The strays were all badly messed up holds, the ones where I yanked the trigger or just held too long and started shaking a bunch, both because of it being a 'bad day' for whatever reason. Think I need to go for a run.
My first-round conclusion is that allowing for variables outside the longer sight, I like it better. I definitely DO NOT recommend it for shooters who focus on the front sight, as the apparently increased movement when that's in focus is rather unnerving. As I understand it, that would include most shooters, as focusing on the foresight is by far more common. So my next question for the Koreans would be 'are you focusing on the front sight, or on the target?' This could be an individual thing tied to my relative inexperience. Perhaps with the more accomplished hold of a longer-term shooter the increased amplitude of the longer sight radius would be subtle enough not to matter. For what it's worth, with the way I focus and use centre aim, this longer sight radius is a positive move, lending a greater sense of precision to what I'm seeing. To a degree I can feel during a session of practice it seems that I am more likely to abort a shot than previously when the sights aren't lining up the way I'd like, as the sight picture is more exacting, making easier to see when I am on the 10 with certainty.
Of course I'll report back here in a week or two and/or sometime later with further comments as the new sight gets more trigger time.