I'm posting this to try to help someone who may wish to create their own front sight. In this example, I have used .080" thick german silver, 1/16" thick copper for the base, hard silver solder and borax type paste flux, and propane with air intake heat. Soldering was done over two bent finishing nails and a fire brick.
1) I cut the pieces from the metal sheet leaving metal on the blade to be removed to create the stud that secures the blade to the base... a hacksaw and fine blade for this. File the base to the dimensions you need.
2) Drill and countersink a hole in the bottom of the copper base to receive the sight blade.
3) Place the silver blade in your vise base up and cut away the silver to expose the ped that will pass through the copper base, plus enough to rivet into the countersink. Rough file the square peg cylindrical. You can continue with a file and make the peg perfectly round or make a cutter to do this quickly, easily and perfectly. I drilled a hole to match the size of the peg into the end of a piece of drill rod, cut a couple of saw cuts to quarter the end of the rod, and filed some back draft on the edges to create cutters. In a drill press this makes quick work of the peg. Clean the copper base with a fine file preparatory for soldering. Place the base over the peg, and rivet the extra silver into the countersink. File flush.
how do you upload pictures4) Flux the joint, cut off a short piece of hard silver solder and place it on the sight. Half of what I've shown is lots. I place the sight on two bent nails on a fire brick so that the sight alone sucks up the heat. the fire brick actually gives back heat that passes the sight and helps give an even heat. Play a carburizing flame over the sight until the solder flows and remove the heat. I'm sorry the computer is placing the images in reverse order, but you can translate that.
5) Clamp the sight by each end of the base in shim stock in your vise and file away the excess solder and oxidation. Polish to suit. Shape blade to taste.
6) Clamp the blade in shim stock (I use steel banding material bent in half) in your vise, and file the dovetail angles on the base. Use a safe triangular file. Le voila!