Siringo
32 Cal.
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2014
- Messages
- 324
- Reaction score
- 264
I bought a Woodsrunner several months ago and finally finished it. I have built 4 other Kiblers but I wanted this to be strictly my deer rifle for the MN woods. Cherry stock (all others are figured maple), browned barrel and lock. Caliber is 54. I wanted to add a sling to it and a rear peep sight. I just loved the sight picture. Well I was really happy how it all turned out and went to shoot it today. Unfortunately it shot 6.5 inches to the left and 6 inches high. I used a “Johnson Peep Sight” mounted so the rear of the peep was flush with the tang barrel junction. On that sight I cut off the peep and drilled and tapped a “Skinner” Lo-pro peep. That combination would effectively lower it from the orginal configuration about a 1/8 inch (I was concerned about front sight height). I also fitted an oversize front sight from TOW to give me a better blade to see (1/10 inch). My whole goal here was to have a traditional looking set of sights that I can actually see at dawn and dusk in the woods. Yet to my disappointment the sights just didn’t line up right. The front sight needs to be higher by 0.15 inches (now it’s too tall). Part of the issue is the barrel is also tapered which can mean higher front sights to bring it in line with rear sights. I also need to move the rear sight 0.20 to the right and I just don’t have that much adjustment. I can move the rear and front 0.1 each effectively to get that 0.20, but it looks lousy.
All these dimensions listed above get cut in half when the original sight set is used. All my muzzleloaders with octagon barrels, front and rear sights are little askew from what would be perceived the c/l of the barrel. Moving the sights further apart just exasperates the problem. So I guess it’s back to stock sights and glow paint!
All these dimensions listed above get cut in half when the original sight set is used. All my muzzleloaders with octagon barrels, front and rear sights are little askew from what would be perceived the c/l of the barrel. Moving the sights further apart just exasperates the problem. So I guess it’s back to stock sights and glow paint!