Anschutz sight adjustment increments

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Jose Rossy
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Anschutz sight adjustment increments

Post by Jose Rossy »

What are the adjustment increments on Anschutz rear sights? If it matters, they are mid 70s vintage.

I am obviously familiar with the American system of minute of angle (or fractions thereof) click values, but not with that the European standard is.

Is it one click = 1 cm/100 meters?
Jay V
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Re: Anschutz sight adjustment increments

Post by Jay V »

Jose Rossy wrote:What are the adjustment increments on Anschutz rear sights? If it matters, they are mid 70s vintage.

I am obviously familiar with the American system of minute of angle (or fractions thereof) click values, but not with that the European standard is.

Is it one click = 1 cm/100 meters?
I'm not the expert here, but I know that Anschutz offers at least 2 different adjustment increments on current sights.

I was told 5 min and 10 min are the choices, and that it is possible to change one to the other.


Jay V
Jose Rossy
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Re: Anschutz sight adjustment increments

Post by Jose Rossy »

Jay V wrote:I know that Anschutz offers at least 2 different adjustment increments on current sights.

I was told 5 min and 10 min are the choices, and that it is possible to change one to the other.


Jay V
I'm sorry, but your answer makes no sense. Are you telling me that the smallest change increment in elevation or windage for an Anschutz sight is 5 minutes of angle?

Not even a military rifle has sights that rough.
PaulB
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Post by PaulB »

Old Anshutz sights of the vintage you mention are approximately 1/6 minute per click (or 6 clicks per inch at 100 yds; 12 clicks per inch at 50 yds)
Jose Rossy
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Post by Jose Rossy »

Thanks Paul. That's more like what I expected.
Jay V
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Re: Anschutz sight adjustment increments

Post by Jay V »

Jose Rossy wrote:
Jay V wrote:I know that Anschutz offers at least 2 different adjustment increments on current sights.

I was told 5 min and 10 min are the choices, and that it is possible to change one to the other.


Jay V
I'm sorry, but your answer makes no sense. Are you telling me that the smallest change increment in elevation or windage for an Anschutz sight is 5 minutes of angle?

Not even a military rifle has sights that rough.

It's possible that I recall the part numbers ending in "5" or "10", in which case it may be 1/5 min and 1/10 min.

Sorry I piped-in without knowing exactly what I was talking about...


Jay
TWP
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Post by TWP »

The newer sights have a /10 or /20 after their part number refering to the number of clicks in a full turn.

Did the older sights part numbers have a similar meaning?
Jose Rossy
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Post by Jose Rossy »

TWP wrote:The newer sights have a /10 or /20 after their part number refering to the number of clicks in a full turn.

Did the older sights part numbers have a similar meaning?
Don't know, but I know those on my rifle have 10 clicks per turn. COuld they be 1 mm per click @50 meters?
Guest

Post by Guest »

Anschutz sights are graded in Miliradians, (1 mil is the angle subtended by 1m at 1000m, so 10cm at 100m). Older Anschutz sights had each click worth 1/20 mil, handily this equates near as dammit, to 1/6 moa. These older sights are also called 10 clicks, as each rotation of the turret was 10 clicks. We shooters do come up with great names don't we!

Newer Anschutz sights have 1/40 mil clicks, each turret rotation taking 20 clicks.

10 click sights; 1 click = 2.5mm @ 50m

20 click sights; 1 click = 1.25mm @ 50m

These are of course nominal and will differ depending upon the sight radius.

Tim S

Exeter UK
Jose Rossy
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Post by Jose Rossy »

Tim, thanks a lot for the clarification.

I am very familiar with the miliradian system, as some of my scopes use the mil-dot system for distance and windage estimation.
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