First time screwing up a dovetail

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

ZastavaGuy

32 Cal
Joined
Feb 25, 2024
Messages
10
Reaction score
13
Location
Kentucky
After decades of getting older and getting poorer, I recently got back into black powder scene and decided it was time to upgrade the sights on my old Investarm Hawken.

I picked up an elevation adjustable plains rifle rear sight from The Log Cabin Shop, cut a perfect dovetail in my barrel, fitted, smoothed and polished the rear sight, and then...

I made a slight adjustment to the height of the sight's tail and went a couple of swipes too many. Needless to say, I ended up having to hammer out some very thin brass to shim the sight.

As I've never had to do this before. Should I leave it shimmed? Should I pop it back off and tin a little bit of solder onto the sight? Or should I just spend 18 bucks and do it over?

I've never messed one up before and therefore I've never had a shimmed sight. No idea of how well it will hold up.
 
After decades of getting older and getting poorer, I recently got back into black powder scene and decided it was time to upgrade the sights on my old Investarm Hawken.

I picked up an elevation adjustable plains rifle rear sight from The Log Cabin Shop, cut a perfect dovetail in my barrel, fitted, smoothed and polished the rear sight, and then...

I made a slight adjustment to the height of the sight's tail and went a couple of swipes too many. Needless to say, I ended up having to hammer out some very thin brass to shim the sight.

As I've never had to do this before. Should I leave it shimmed? Should I pop it back off and tin a little bit of solder onto the sight? Or should I just spend 18 bucks and do it over?

I've never messed one up before and therefore I've never had a shimmed sight. No idea of how well it will hold up.
To me it is all a matter of ZastavaGuy accepting what he has, as long as it does the job and the shims are in solid. If you don't like it, better pop for another $18.
Just remember you are not the only one on this forum that filed a couple too many.
Larry
 
Depends on what got filed and how particular you are. Several times faced with an undersized sight base or similar thing needing a home in a dovetail slot, I've used a cold chisel and hammer. Put the cold chisel real close to the opening on both sides, parallel, and give it a solid whack. Do the same on the other side. Bends metal down towards the hole. Bubba work.

Yup, it'll leave a sideways mark on either side of the slot, but if the cut wasn't too large to start with - it'll hold. If you really screwed it up or can't stand the thought of two "tasteful", perhaps somewhat decorative lines adjacent to the slot in question, just buy another sight and start over. I have had and have still several guns around here fixed thusly. Poor folks ...
 
Murphy's Rule for gun makers: modify the part that costs the least.

In this case I would leave the barrel dovetail alone. I see three options. One, leave the shims; Two, gently peen the sight base to spread the metal to fill the dovetail; and three (the least risky) buy another sight.

Situations like these is why I have a "moaning chair" in my shop where I can sit down, hold my head in my hands, and contemplate the vagaries of the universe....
 
Your gun doesn't really need an adjustable sight, does it? When we find a good load, we also know what the trajectory is for its effective range. Or, in my case, the effective range of my eyes. Get a chunk of iron and make a rear sight, leaving the dovetail oversized. Then you can gradually file it down to fit.
 
You might try some of the green penetrating loctite on the dovetail to give it some more permanence.
 
I have seen guns with shims under the sights before. As long it is a good tight fit I wouldn't worry about it.
 
Problem solved. I had a screw on California sight sitting here collecting dust and I figured why not use it for something. I cut about 3/4 of an inch off of it and turned it into a 3/8 dovetail base. My OCD is now at rest.
IMG_20240306_172152760~2_copy_1148x1024.jpg
 
Back
Top