Ken Campbell Iowa
posted this
26 January 2017
hi gary ... heh this whole thread is kind of a * nerd's holiday ” sort of thing .... not much to gain or lose here for sure ...
...but actually i did use your suggested software and tried it for both 200 yd. zeros and 300 yard zeros .... reasonable zeros for coyote shooting ... they don't stop and pose at the little yardage signs ... in both cases the trajectory as seen by the sight up to the zero distance is flatter. this is because the higher vantage point of the higher sight is * looking down the impact paths * of the falling bullet .
,,,, while we are enjoying our little trip into the arcane, we could say that a very high sight allows/forces the shooter to position the barrel lower into his center of mass and thus decrease the effects of recoil on the system as a whole . consider the extremely high ribs on olympic trap guns ...
.... notice than when shooting handguns we bring the sight up to eye level ... we don't screek our neck down 8 inches and hold the pistol at shoulder level ... why not bring our rifle sight up to a comfortable eye level ?? ... lastly, consider that john dillenger shot his tommy gun from the waist ... easier to control the recoil ...
....also, an advantage of high sights is that it increases the awareness sensitivity of circumferential sight cant ... a longer indicator arm, so to speak .... if a one-foot tall front sight is anywhere near the top of it's arc your gun is very level ...
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but back to the real world :: just to start, such a goofy contraption of a very high-mounted sight wouldn't fit in my gun case ... then it would catch on all the brush as i push through the likely coyote sleeping quarters ... then my red-neck buddies wouldn't hunt with me .... then my 18 power scope would outweigh my 9 lb rifle and squirm out of my hands on a running shot ...
...and all to gain a slightly flatter sighting picture . ...
ken