You seem to share my view that the best iron sight for a Marlin is not an open sight, but an aperture/peep/ghost-ring. My Marlin's got a Skinner - excellent on the range!Williams and Skinners both do a peep site
Interesting. I read “open” and assumed not an optic rather than a notch or V.You seem to share my view that the best iron sight for a Marlin is not an open sight, but an aperture/peep/ghost-ring. My Marlin's got a Skinner - excellent on the range!
The OP wants open, though?
I may be confusing the name, what I'm suggesting is a ring sight, which is still open in my view (no pun), however both the companies I mention list them as peep sights, I know someone at my club uses one in the open class, personally I just put a red dot on mineYou seem to share my view that the best iron sight for a Marlin is not an open sight, but an aperture/peep/ghost-ring. My Marlin's got a Skinner - excellent on the range!
The OP wants open, though?
I’ve heard some people buy dead black paint for the front sight aswellAnother trick I do is buy a tiny pot of fluorescent lime or yellow coloured paint and dab a tiny amount on the prepared surface of the front sight.
That's good if you are shooting paper with a six o'clock hold and or suffering from sunlight illuminating one side of the front sight. If it's shiny it will cause you to hold off a touch.I’ve heard some people buy dead black paint for the front sight aswell
Hopefully when I get a new sight my groupings will be a lot tighterThat's good if you are shooting paper with a six o'clock hold and or suffering from sunlight illuminating one side of the front sight. If it's shiny it will cause you to hold off a touch.