Fiberoptic or Tritium Sights for S&W 629-6 4"

Para Bellum

New member
Hi Folks,

in certain light conditions the factory sights on my (great) S&W 629-6 4" are a disadvantage compared to the tritium on my Glock.

Can anybody here recommend certain Fiberoptic or Tritium Sights - front and rear -for my S&W 629-6 4"?

Have a good day,
PB
 

2damnold4this

New member
I'm not sure what is out there for the 629. I like the Ameriglo pro Idot on my Glock and use an XS Big dot on my S&W 342. It seems that XS makes Big Dots for your revolver but I don't know if Ameriglo does.
 

mete

New member
In metallic silhouette matches we found the S&W red insert would shoot low by two clicks @ 50 yds when fired in sunlight compared to shade ! It glows so much you have to pull the sight down to see the target ! Fiber optic will be similar. None of my guns have red or fiber optic sights !!!
None of the deer I've taken have complained !! :p
 

BigJimP

New member
I would not change the sights on my older S&W revolvers...but on one of my newer revolvers, a Freedom Arms, I do like a green fiber optic front sight....if you have an option for one.

My new S&W performance center 627's ...the 5" came with a gold dot front sight / and the 2 5/8" came with a red ramp front sight.../ both of them are fine as well ---- and even for tactical shooting, I'm not having an issue picking up either one quickly.
 

hartcreek

Moderator
What are the specifics that you are trying to deal with? Tritium is good but it will fade. I put tritium on my 624 more the twenty years ago. If what you need is easier target acquisition I can show you how to mount a laser under the grip on you 629. I surprised the range officers last night when they saw my set up and the red dot on the target down the lane.

If you want to know just PM me.
 

turkeestalker

New member
I wound up purchasing one of the Meprolight Tritium front sights for my SP101 and I'm sold on them.
I do not own any pistols or revolvers with fiber optic sights on them, but have some rifles and shotguns with them, for me they're just a bit too bright in good light. So much so as to obscure the target as mete mentioned.
 

ScaryWoody

New member
If you are going to use the revolver for self defense go with Tritium. If it's target only go for the Fiber Optic. I have tritium font sights on my SP101 and love it.
 

John D

New member
I put a Hi-Viz front sight on my GP100 - I'm happy with this. It comes with 3 or 4 different colors so you can find the one you like. I think the red was a little bright and I ended up using the green. Of course, changing the front sight on this Ruger is just a matter of pushing a button.....
 

Para Bellum

New member
Still haven't found any suitable tritium or fiberoptic sights for my S&W 629. What a shame. It would be a perfect tracking sidearm for stopping wounded boar....
 

disseminator

New member
Have you considered a optic like a trijicon RMR or Leupold Delta Point?

They are really small and will give you what you seek. I contacted Trijicon to inquire if the RMR could stand up to the recoil of my 460 XVR and they assured me it would.
 

Big Dave

New member
It really depends on your use. For informal range fun the fiber optic is hard to beat. I can lay down steel plates at 50 yards quickly with fiber optic sights. Dawson Precision makes the best and will custom make whatever height / width you need for a small upcharge. I find the FO draws my eye better to the front sight. For slow fire precision a plain black sight still rules. If you need night sights then you know what to do.
 

Nanuk

New member
Is you front sight pinned on? if so the options are easy. Having carried pistols with night sights in LE for a couple of decades I am not a huge fan. If it is dark enough for the night sights to be relevant it is to dark ti ID your target.

On my personal Glock I have Dawson Precision sights, FO in the front plain black on the back. I tried FO front and back, trying to line them up fast is like looking at hieroglyphics.
 

44 AMP

Staff
The half life of Tritium is 12.3 years. 12 years, 4 months.

Tritium sights do fade as the tritium decays.
Fiber optics are plastic ( a polymer), need at least some area exposed to gather light, and are more fragile.

I don't know exactly how long tritium sights are "good" for. I do know that by 30+ years the ones on a model 66 I inherited were faded green dots in direct light and just barely able to be seen in total darkness.

Drop your gun so the fiber optic hits something hard, it can break. Or be knocked off/out.

You need to decide what will be best for your use, in the long run.

There are advantages and drawbacks to both.
 
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