I'd like to say that sighting in a rifle is a blind pig finding an acorn at times. The engineer in me disagrees and says "use math". So I did.
John Bergmann replaced my sights for me with some desired non-adjustable ones. John's a super guy.
I knew what load the rifle likes, so I shot a group. It shot low, just as John said it would, and left a little.
I took my target home, and got out the Starrett caliper. I just used "similar triangles" from geometry, and figured out the distance between my sights in inches, how many inches are in 50 yards, and how much off the target's group was in inches. In other words, an example would be 27 inches is to 1,800 inches, as (?) is to 4 inches low. Comes up to .06".
I measured, and filed in the front sight. I also tapped the rear slightly after making a pencil mark to see how far things move once tapped.
I took it out today and plinked a fouler shot. I them settled in at the bench to see how my math worked. Here's the result of the first shot. My thought was "I'm good!" :-)
The remainder of the group clustered right around it. Love those Green Mountain barrels. Amazing how geometry still works in a digital world.
Best wishes, and God Bless, Marc PS, my day-glo poster paper target really works for my old eyes. Try it sometime.
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