The Down Range Forum
Member Section => Down Range Cafe => Topic started by: Bidah on October 05, 2007, 11:27:38 AM
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I have been thinking of getting these for one of my pistols to give it a try. Anyone use these? Ideas? Opinion?
Thanks.
-Bidah
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I have them on Browning HiPower , Charles Daly copy of a BHP. and am having them installed on a 1911 even as I type.I really do like them,I find the big dot to be the fastest front sights I can use,65 year old eyes, dont you know.hth Doug
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I've got a set of 24/7 on a PM40 and another set on a Para CCW. They work great for their intended purpose, which is quick sight acquisition. I have found personally, that my accuracy suffers at longer ranges, but I think that is simply because I haven't taken the time to train with them as I should. I've shot several club level IDPA stages with the Kahr and they do a very good job at close ranges.
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I tried the Big Dot front sight on the revolver I use for IDPA, and found it too coarse. The Standard Dot works well, and I've installed on most of my handguns.
Downzero
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Anyone ever try the one ragged hole sights for their guns? I have been to their site but was wondering if anyone had any experience with them. www.oneraggedhole.com
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ncrguy,I put a ORH sight on a 94 Winnie ,357.It worked entirely to good, my son took it home with him :-\
Doug
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Thank you to all who posted. Hmm.. I guess it is time to try it or stick with the 3 dots.. :)
Sometimes I just detest making decisions..
-Bidah
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I shot a bunch of them recently at GUNSITE, and I'm going to put a set on my carry guns...
Michael B
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MY Daly clone HI Power has them the more i shoot i like. They work.
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The XS Express Sights are danged quick to see, but require a different sight-picture for different ranges. At close range, you just cover your intended impact area with the big dot, but at longer range (25 yards, for example) you have to use a 6 O'Clock hold to hit. This works fine, after a bit of experimentation - but requires a bit of decision-making while already busy shooting.
Like M.B., I was exposed to them at Gunsite (where they had some very clear posters illustrating the different sight-pictures required at different ranges). Since my eyes don't seem to be teenagers anymore and are taking longer and longer to snap a sight-picture into focus, I talked to the folks in the Gunsmithy about installing a set of XS sights. They asked how long I'd been using regular sights on my pistols ('bout 30 years), and suggested that it was a bit late in the game for me to start trying to learn a new sight-picture with a built-in zone-management requirement.
What they suggested was that I try a compromise they call their "Old-Guy Sights" - an XS Big-Dot with a correspondingly sized round notch in the rear sight, which permits a conventional sight-picture with the top of the front dot level with the top of the rear notch. There was a comfortable bit of daylight showing around the front dot inside the rear notch, and it didn't look as if it could possibly be very precise. Corey let me try a couple of magazines through a shop-gun with this set-up on the 6" plates set up 25 yards behind the Gunsmithy. 15 satisfying "Clangs" later, and I was sold on the idea. The equivalent of "head-shots" as quick as I could spot'em. Just cover the gong and press the trigger - I was shooting like I was 20 years younger!
So, if you're not too set in your ways, the factory XS Express Sights are definitely a good thing. If you ARE a bit set in your ways (I prefer to think of it as a set of carefully cultivated conditioned-reflexes ;D), you might consider the Gunsite Old-Guy Sights.
-KBS