joeboleo1 said:
I was just worried about getting down too much on the gun....
A lot of people have difficulty when they first start shooting a smoothbore, and I think the main reason is that it requires a different sight picture than the rifles they have been use to. But, a simple experiment will show that it's not really as different as it seems.
Shoulder a rifle with both rear and front sights and align your eye with the sights in the normal way. Now, without moving anything, change your point of attention... look at the barrel instead of the sights. That can be tough to do if your rear sight is a large one. If it's small enough for you to see most of the barrel, you'll see that you are looking down on the barrel, and it seems to be point upward at the muzzle end. That's not an illusion. The instant the ball leaves the muzzle it begins to drop, and if you point the bore at the target, the ball will always hit low, can't do anything else. So, we set our guns up so that the bore is pointing up a little, just enough to exactly offset that drop.
That barrel actually does point up at the muzzle end, and you are looking down on it, you just don't usually notice it because you are looking at the sights. Line up your smoothbore without sights and you will see the same thing, but it will look strange because you haven't been noticing it with your rifle. A different sight picture, that's true, but not nearly as different as first impressions. And it's what you need to see.
The look of your particular gun will depend on the thickness of the breech, the barrel profile, etc., because it's the line of the bore which has to point up, not the top of the barrel. So, your milage may vary, and that might explain why some people have more difficulty making the switch than others.
After I figured out what was going on and made the adjustment, I still use the front sight just as with a rifle, put the tip of it exactly where I want the ball to hit. It occasionally does.
Here's an interesting little graphic. Notice the relationship of the line of sight to the barrel.
Spence