Flatted rear aperture.
Moderators: pilkguns, Marcus, m1963, David Levene, Spencer
Flatted rear aperture.
When I'm in sitting I get a rear aperture picture that is "D" shaped with the flat part at the bottom. I know not everyone shoots sitting, but it must have come up for others. I've tried moving the comb, thinking my cheek was pushed too far up. I've tried moving the sight forward and aft. It gets a bit better by opening the rear aperture, but doesn't go away entirely. Intentionally opening my eyes very wide helps a bit.
I've seen this on long range guns where the rear sight moves vertically enough that it no longer points directly at the front sight, but in this instance there is no sight adjustment going on from prone or kneeling, where everything is fine.
Anything else I should try?
I've seen this on long range guns where the rear sight moves vertically enough that it no longer points directly at the front sight, but in this instance there is no sight adjustment going on from prone or kneeling, where everything is fine.
Anything else I should try?
- ShootingSight
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I have seen this, and bizzarely, if the flat is on the bottom, the blockage is on the top - I don't know why it works that way. Try looking through the sight and take a piece of paper and insert it between the sight and your eye from above. You will see the aperture disappear with the flat spot starting on the bottom. Very strange.
So if you are seeing flat on the bottom, it is likely your eyelid or eyebrow that is crowding from above.
Sounds stupid, but I actually trim my eyebrows for matches. I trim both sides so I don't look lopsided.
So if you are seeing flat on the bottom, it is likely your eyelid or eyebrow that is crowding from above.
Sounds stupid, but I actually trim my eyebrows for matches. I trim both sides so I don't look lopsided.
I had this before I got hold of some sight raising blocks. In trying to get my face down to get behind the sights I tilted my head forwards, and ended up looking through my top eyelid, which gave a flat spot on the bottom. If you're shooting sitting then, it probably the same issue.ShootingSight wrote: So if you are seeing flat on the bottom, it is likely your eyelid or eyebrow that is crowding from above.