engravertom
40 Cal.
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2007
- Messages
- 137
- Reaction score
- 0
Hello folks,
I went to the range the other day, after losing the front sight off of the Musket. The base of the lug, into which the sight blade had been soldered, was still there. I used it as a front sight, and tried to hold it in the bottom of the rear notch. I decided to fire off hand at 25 yards, with my head further back on the stock, to see if it was more comfortable on the cheekbone.
It was more comfortable to shoot, but the point of impact was high. The first three uppermost shots on the target where the ones fired at that point.
I decided to leave the range, and remove the rear sight after work the next day. I was hoping by doing so that the point of impact would be lowered.
I took the barrel out, and then noticed that it had been bent upwards. Talking to the former owner, he confirmed that he had bent the barrel to change the point of impact. I went ahead and removed the rear sight, using a heavy duty belt sander, then finishing with finer grits and a wire wheel to blend it in. A bit of a hasty job, but it will do for now. You can see the file mark still in the barrel that was right next to the rear sight. I didn't want to try and polish that out. I may get it welded up and polish it out later.
A few days after, i stopped at the range just ahead of a thunder storm. I walked up to the 25 yard line, and got off one shot off hand before the sky opened up. The fourth shot, slightly below the others, was the one i fired that day on the same target.
Now, I am considering having the barrel straightened, as it presently points upwards. The bend also explains the tight spot in the barrel during loading.My thought is that may lower the point of impact without the need to add much height to the front sight. I will shot another full group before doing so, to make sure that the one shot is not a flyer.
The musket is more comfortable to shoot without the rear sight, and with holding my head on the stock in a more upright fashion further back on the stock.
I'm pretty well hooked!
take care,
Tom
ps the shots are around 8" high above POA at 25 yards.
I went to the range the other day, after losing the front sight off of the Musket. The base of the lug, into which the sight blade had been soldered, was still there. I used it as a front sight, and tried to hold it in the bottom of the rear notch. I decided to fire off hand at 25 yards, with my head further back on the stock, to see if it was more comfortable on the cheekbone.
It was more comfortable to shoot, but the point of impact was high. The first three uppermost shots on the target where the ones fired at that point.
I decided to leave the range, and remove the rear sight after work the next day. I was hoping by doing so that the point of impact would be lowered.
I took the barrel out, and then noticed that it had been bent upwards. Talking to the former owner, he confirmed that he had bent the barrel to change the point of impact. I went ahead and removed the rear sight, using a heavy duty belt sander, then finishing with finer grits and a wire wheel to blend it in. A bit of a hasty job, but it will do for now. You can see the file mark still in the barrel that was right next to the rear sight. I didn't want to try and polish that out. I may get it welded up and polish it out later.
A few days after, i stopped at the range just ahead of a thunder storm. I walked up to the 25 yard line, and got off one shot off hand before the sky opened up. The fourth shot, slightly below the others, was the one i fired that day on the same target.
Now, I am considering having the barrel straightened, as it presently points upwards. The bend also explains the tight spot in the barrel during loading.My thought is that may lower the point of impact without the need to add much height to the front sight. I will shot another full group before doing so, to make sure that the one shot is not a flyer.
The musket is more comfortable to shoot without the rear sight, and with holding my head on the stock in a more upright fashion further back on the stock.
I'm pretty well hooked!
take care,
Tom
ps the shots are around 8" high above POA at 25 yards.