The Accurate Reloading Forums
Replacement sights on 94
30 October 2014, 10:50
DCS MemberReplacement sights on 94
I'm thinking about replacing the buckhorn rear on my 94 saddle ring carbine. Any suggestions?
I meant to be DSC Member...bad typing skills.
Marcus Cady
DRSS
31 October 2014, 00:41
steyrsteveLyman 66.
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31 October 2014, 09:34
DCS MemberThanks. It's a truck gun I bought for swine. I'm thinking the Truglo replacements. Any experience out there with these?
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Marcus Cady
DRSS
01 November 2014, 05:29
kingdDCS what caliber is your truck gun? I have Winch. Trapper 16 1/2" brl in 44 mag. She is sweet. I call her Betty, lol.
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02 November 2014, 18:48
carpetman1I have no experience with the dot sights. The peep sights like the Lyman 66 work great. For us old geezers they have the added benefit of making our eyes focus. I use peep sights on some of my air rifles and do about as good with them as I do my scoped rifles.
03 November 2014, 00:47
DCS MemberIt's a .30-30 I got from JudgeG here.
I'm just not accustomed to the buckhorn style of the Lyman 66 style. I'm leaning towards the Truglo set up because it's similar to pistol sights I'm comfortable with.
I meant to be DSC Member...bad typing skills.
Marcus Cady
DRSS
04 November 2014, 07:27
MarkI put a fiber optic ghost ring on my 94, it's in this thread and I am quite happy:
http://forums.accuratereloadin...061095991#5061095991Well, almost quite happy. At some point I'd like to put a tritium insert in the front sight but I don't really have much need for it like that but it would make it a bit faster in low light that way.
for every hour in front of the computer you should have 3 hours outside
04 November 2014, 09:12
DCS Memberquote:
Originally posted by Mark:
I put a fiber optic ghost ring on my 94, it's in this thread and I am quite happy:
http://forums.accuratereloadin...061095991#5061095991Well, almost quite happy. At some point I'd like to put a tritium insert in the front sight but I don't really have much need for it like that but it would make it a bit faster in low light that way.
Mark, that's cool. I went ahead and ordered the Truglo. They were only like $25. If I don't like them, I'll try something else.
I meant to be DSC Member...bad typing skills.
Marcus Cady
DRSS
I meant to be DSC Member...bad typing skills.
Marcus Cady
DRSS
05 December 2014, 22:09
AtkinsonI just stuck a Lyman flip up tang sight (peep) on my old SRC 25-35, and shrunk the 3 shot group a full inch..I thought my eyes were better than that..Got the sight from Brownells. Guess I better order another for my 30-30
Ray Atkinson
Atkinson Hunting Adventures
10 Ward Lane,
Filer, Idaho, 83328
208-731-4120
rayatkinsonhunting@gmail.com
17 January 2015, 01:19
Rule 303quote:
Originally posted by carpetman1:
I have no experience with the dot sights. The peep sights like the Lyman 66 work great. For us old geezers they have the added benefit of making our eyes focus. I use peep sights on some of my air rifles and do about as good with them as I do my scoped rifles.
This is your answer. The Lyman or Williams peep sights. Stick a true glow front sight on as well, works even better.
17 January 2015, 22:23
joessI put a Williams peep on mine,nice unit,screwed right on. Not sure what I'm going to do up front though, thats a problem for older eyes, tying to to see that little dot at dusk.
Thinking maybe a gold bead, or I wonder if a glow fiber site would work.
06 March 2015, 15:01
sambarman338I've got a Lyman 66 on my 375 Win and like it - with a couple of reservations.
First, the disc is no good for hunting and to throw it away leaves a ghost ring a little too big for much accuracy. So, I sawed off half of the disc shank, cut a slot in the cut side of the smaller part, added a bit of epoxy and screwed it in from the front, to make an intermediate aperture.
Secondly, my son fell over and bent the arm down. If I were installing a new one, I would get the arm drilled and tapped on the outer side and add a second set screw to protect it once zeroed.
06 March 2015, 18:41
vlwtx348One of these can be used without altering your gun.
http://www.skinnersights.com/barrel_mount_6.htmlI have the above sight on my Browning SRC.
I have a fiber optic front on my 94 trapper. To me, the peep rear makes for faster sight acquisition.
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DSC
NRA Benefactor
06 March 2015, 21:16
AtkinsonYou CANNOT install a side mounted peep sight such as a Lyman or Redfield on a Saddle Ring Carbine unless you remove the saddle ring and the stud, that's a sho nuff no-no IMO!
You can install a tang mounted peep sight and those sights are available from Brownells and they work great.
Also, a vintage Win mod. 94 SRC may be a truck gun indeed but its still worth a lot of money unless its been monkied with. Mine is truly a worn SRC in 25-35 and the bore is rough, but it shoots very accurately. I have been offered $1300 for it on more than a few occasions, and the offers keep going up, but its not for sale..I sure wouldn't drill and tap it.
Ray Atkinson
Atkinson Hunting Adventures
10 Ward Lane,
Filer, Idaho, 83328
208-731-4120
rayatkinsonhunting@gmail.com
06 March 2015, 22:19
vlwtx348I started to disagree with you, but then I remembered the William sight on my trapper was mounted to the AE scope mount holes and not the side. Even so, I had to rotate the ring out of the way.
Tang sights are the most accurate (IMHO) but I don't like them in my way. I still have two rifles with tang sights I haven't gotten around to replacing, yet.
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DSC
NRA Benefactor
08 March 2015, 08:46
sambarman338quote:
Originally posted by vlwtx348:
One of these can be used without altering your gun.
http://www.skinnersights.com/barrel_mount_6.html
I'm afraid I don't see much point in having the aperture so far away. It kind of defeats the whole idea of a rear peep so close you don't even think of focusing on it.
08 March 2015, 18:47
DManson+1 on Sambarman's comment. Aperture sights are fast only if they're close to your shooting eye. Further, impressive accuracy may be obtained by using smaller apertures (if available light and the target allows). Not so with apertures mounted 8"-12" away from your eye.
Dave Manson
09 March 2015, 07:49
vlwtx348quote:
Originally posted by sambarman338:
quote:
Originally posted by vlwtx348:
One of these can be used without altering your gun.
http://www.skinnersights.com/barrel_mount_6.html
I'm afraid I don't see much point in having the aperture so far away. It kind of defeats the whole idea of a rear peep so close you don't even think of focusing on it.
It's much faster than most poor rear sights. You don't have to look at the rear sight at all, let alone focus on it. You look through it like you would any peep or ghost ring.
Yes, I generally like them mounted farther back, like my William or Lyman sights or my Providence Tool Company's Pattern 21 sight. And while it's not as inherently accurate, I prefer the Skinner barrel mount over a traditional tang sight for multiple reasons.
Opinions vary and everyone has different tastes. I'm glad there are so many options out there for us to choose from. Of the four different types of sights I mentioned, I have at least one levergun with such a sight installed and hunt with them all.
My only gripe with Skinner sights is the font he uses to engrave his brand on the sights. A simple rollmark would look so much better.
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NRA Benefactor
13 March 2015, 01:16
TX NimrodI stuck a Bushnell TRS-25 on my M94 Trapper and really like it. My eyes are such that irons just don't cut it, in low light especially. The TRS-25 is very lightweight and though it does stick up a bit it is still very low as optics go. Just an option.
.15 March 2015, 07:13
AtkinsonWe're talking two different ball games here. A modern trapper is of little value technically speaking, but a 1900s Saddle Ring Carbine, even in very poor condition fetches at least a grand, and a real nice one up to $4500 or twice that for a few that have been cared for and like new..So the collectable must not be changed at all, and only a tang mounted peep will do that, and be sure to put the old barrel sight and tang screws in a bag so if you decide to sell it, it will be original..
The modern SRC, you can do whatever you want with them, but they only made a few so changing them might be a poor financial decision??
Ray Atkinson
Atkinson Hunting Adventures
10 Ward Lane,
Filer, Idaho, 83328
208-731-4120
rayatkinsonhunting@gmail.com
09 May 2015, 12:05
DCS Memberquote:
Originally posted by Atkinson:
We're talking two different ball games here. A modern trapper is of little value technically speaking, but a 1900s Saddle Ring Carbine, even in very poor condition fetches at least a grand, and a real nice one up to $4500 or twice that for a few that have been cared for and like new..So the collectable must not be changed at all, and only a tang mounted peep will do that, and be sure to put the old barrel sight and tang screws in a bag so if you decide to sell it, it will be original..
The modern SRC, you can do whatever you want with them, but they only made a few so changing them might be a poor financial decision??
Ray,
I went with the Tru-glo set up and it's a better sight picture. I did save the original buckhorn sights. It is a modern rig. I'm still needing to dial it in at the range, but I feel more confident out to 100 with these sights.
I meant to be DSC Member...bad typing skills.
Marcus Cady
DRSS
13 May 2015, 00:04
AtkinsonNo doubt the peep or receiver sight or ghost peep whatever you want to call it is almost as good as a scope and better in some conditions..certain better than barrel mounted sights..That said I have done some pretty fancy shooting with original barrel mounted sights.
Ray Atkinson
Atkinson Hunting Adventures
10 Ward Lane,
Filer, Idaho, 83328
208-731-4120
rayatkinsonhunting@gmail.com
09 November 2015, 06:43
DCS MemberI've been meaning to post regarding the Tru-Glo sights. I love the sight picture, but it shoots about 6' high at 100 at the lowest setting. Hmm...
I meant to be DSC Member...bad typing skills.
Marcus Cady
DRSS
10 November 2015, 08:33
MarkHere is Brownells sight correction calculator:
http://www.brownells.com/GunTe...detail.htm?lid=13093Take a couple shots at 25 yards, measure how much too high it is, punch the numbers in and it will tell you how much higher the front sight needs to be.
for every hour in front of the computer you should have 3 hours outside
02 December 2015, 20:40
AtkinsonMark,
With irons the range should be 12 yards, with a scope its 25..IN a mod. 94 or Marlin lever gun the 12 yard target will technically put you 3 inches high at 100 and dead on at 150 and 5 inches low at 200..It generally works out, but you always need to test it as I'm sure barrel harmonics can make subtle changes..
Ray Atkinson
Atkinson Hunting Adventures
10 Ward Lane,
Filer, Idaho, 83328
208-731-4120
rayatkinsonhunting@gmail.com
21 June 2016, 05:46
AtkinsonI recently mounted a Providence peep sight, its a LYman mod. 21 Knock off of yesteryear is being produced by produced by them and marketed by Buffalo Arms...I stuck in on my Browning 348 and its a dandy, had to drill and tap two holes however..
I have an old pre war 30-30 that shoots extra great so I am going to mount a Providence on it also as its been D&T for a scope and already has 4 holes in its off side, soooo, it will forever be a great shooter, nothing more..I can live with that. this sight sells for $138.00 and is the best of all for shooter lever guns IMO..
Ray Atkinson
Atkinson Hunting Adventures
10 Ward Lane,
Filer, Idaho, 83328
208-731-4120
rayatkinsonhunting@gmail.com