Mosin sight-in messup

dabluesguy

New member
So a friend and I go out to the range to do some shooting and for him to sight-in his hex receiver 91/30. We put it on my lead sled and eventually got it on paper. We used my new front sight adjustment tool to get the windage and then worked on the elevation. As is common, it shot high so we added a little piece of tubing on the front sight and got it dialed in. With his last cartridge he was going to shoot the 400 yard gong so he went to adjust the elevation on the sight. Guess what...it was already set at 400 the whole time we were sighting in. What a couple of knuckleheads!! So I guess we start over.
 

Hardcase

New member
When I do stuff like that, I just consider it another opportunity to go shooting. It feels a whole lot better that way! :p
 

chiefr

New member
I always remember FORS when sighting in any milsurp.
Front-Opposite; Rear-Same

I have made it standard practice to bring a hammer, a brass drift, and a file to the range when shooting a new milsurp. I have had to file down front sites on more than one occasion as people next to me ask- WTH.
Rarely have I ever found a milsurp that I did not need to site in. Yes I have made mistakes like you but chalk it up as learning.
One other interesting note in regards to milsurps involves the ammo IE: SMLE#4 used 174 mil ball ammo @ 2440 fps. As mil surp ammo is no longer around, it is common to shoot the easy to find domestic ammo 150gr @ 2600 fps, so naturally it will shoot high.
 

jsmaye

New member
I had read somewhere, possibly on this site, that all these old full-figured turn-of-the-century battle rifles were originally sighted-in at a minimum of 400-500 yards. War was different then.
 

Avenger

New member
The US Army used 200 yards for a battle zero...so did the Soviet Union. With a 200 yard zero, you'll be "close enough" to hit a human sized target out to 400 even if you forget to adjust the sights.
 

jsmaye

New member
Re-consulting the vast (but inconsistent) internet gun forums and sites still places the battle zero of most battle rifles between 300-400 yards, with most around 300. Now, <they> could all be wrong or...:confused:
 
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