Unorthodox Dot Sight Mounting
Posted: Tue Nov 13, 2012 12:50 pm
I have seen some photos in magazine articles that show a "different" way of mounting a dot sight to a Bullseye pistol.
There are 2 rings secured to the front tube without having any attached to the rear tube!
Was this done to please a lazy photographer or is this how the pistol is really used when on the range?
Did the shooter resort to this method as no other options were available
or was this some attempt at improving the gun's balance?
Have any of you ever tried doing this?
With so much of the sight's weight unsupported, isn't it subjected to a lot of shock and vibration? Won't it fail after a minimal amount of shooting?
Would you get away with this only on a .22? What about on a .45ACP?
With my UltraDots, I've always used a ring on the front tube and another on the rear. I'm just curious about how successfull this other method is.
Please comment.
There are 2 rings secured to the front tube without having any attached to the rear tube!
Was this done to please a lazy photographer or is this how the pistol is really used when on the range?
Did the shooter resort to this method as no other options were available
or was this some attempt at improving the gun's balance?
Have any of you ever tried doing this?
With so much of the sight's weight unsupported, isn't it subjected to a lot of shock and vibration? Won't it fail after a minimal amount of shooting?
Would you get away with this only on a .22? What about on a .45ACP?
With my UltraDots, I've always used a ring on the front tube and another on the rear. I'm just curious about how successfull this other method is.
Please comment.