I find that a peep sight like Eric shows on his rifle works very well for me but the only draw back is the amount of light it lets through to the eye. In the woods and at certain times of the day it would be hard to see the front sight / game.
One thing you could do is to drill out that aperture, tap it, and then use replaceable inserts for Lyman, Redfield, or Williams sights. You could even drill out one of those to your own preference. Williams, for example, has an aperture with a 0.150 hole size called, oddly enough, the "twilight aperture". Look on places like Champion's Choice, TOW, Midway, Apertures-N-More, etc. for a range of possibilities.I find that a peep sight like Eric shows on his rifle works very well for me but the only draw back is the amount of light it lets through to the eye. In the woods and at certain times of the day it would be hard to see the front sight / game.
Last time I checked it is OK for you to do whatever you like with items that belong to you so just outfit your gun the way you want to its historical correct or not if it lets you see your target or game keep shooting and enjoyYep. Actually, the reason was my eyesight is getting progressively worse. I had ordered and paid for two peep sights for my wife's and my Hawken rifles, but our vaunted customs are being pineapples and we still don't have them. My anger and frustration are getting the better part of me. I mounted the red dot because I WANT to enjoy our sport. BTW, if you're getting emotional because I mounted a red dot sight on my barrel, you have a problem, not me. It's time you find a new hobby. I'll stay with mine as long as the Lord allows me to.
I'd love to find some of these for my Pedersoli Hawken riflesAlthough they were made in the middle of the 20th C, these two scopes would not have been out of the ordiany by 1862, when the first Whitworth rifles were arriving in the Confederacy. They are both VERY similar to those Col. Davidson scopes side-mounted on some Whitworth rifles by Confederate sharpshooters.
The front slider - here the left-hand - adjusts the focus of the target - the right-hand slider adjusts the focus of the crosshair. Azimuth and elevation on these more modern scopes is carried out by twiddling the knobs. When fitted to the Whitworth rifle the front of the scope would have been mounted on a swivelling mount to allow the tube to rotate about its axis.
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I have a top shooter friend that JB Welds a scope mount on some of the competition B/P guns he builds while he is working up a load, he says the JB Weld scope mount pops right off with heat.
I can't see sights worth a hoot either with my 74 year old eyes, I did make a peep for my deer rifle that works so
well I feel like I am cheating after seeing blurry sights for the last 5 or 6 years.
This works for me but was a pain to make and adjust to work just right, I had to re-bend it a dozen times. I adjusted it to put the front sight blade perfectly centered and level with the notch of the rear sight.
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LOL, i am from the South, i must be thereMy eyes have really gone south in the past couple of years. So much so that I sold off 75% of my rifle collection. I sold off the plain iron sighted pieces first and kept my military peep sight pieces. Then I couldn't see peep sights and sold those off. Trying to carry three different reader magnification glasses to the range was getting just plain old.
I started putting red dots on guns that had a mounting area for them. Then the red dot reticles became blurry. The red dots got switched out for scopes. Now every serious rifle I own has a scope. Some receiver mounts. Some scout mounts.
Failing eyesight stinks for gun owners. In six decades, I swore I'd never mount a scope on a muzzle loader. Mostly for looks. Partly because there's no stock bolt hole placement for a mount. But I have a drill press and bits and taps and I'm not afraid to use them.
Scopes on American Long Rifles I believe is a crime for which you go south when you die.
But on short, dedicated deer rifle, mount away I say.
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