View Full Version : Buffington Sight question
Farmall-130
06-15-2021, 04:19
Model 1884 Buffington sight has a aperture (peep) and a ?Christmas Tree? cutout on the sliding leaf. I understand the aperture?s purpose. The Christmas Tree?s ?trunk? is another sight notch. My question is why does the cutout have the triangular shape? There must be a reason for having a angular shape.
I’m guessing here, but it may provide better centering of the entire field of view.
I know it helps me get a good sight picture.
The is from the Trapdoor Collector website:
https://www.trapdoorcollector.com//pics_html/Buffington1.jpg
https://www.trapdoorcollector.com//pics_html/buffington2.jpg
Farmall-130
06-15-2021, 07:29
I have the book, ?Loading Cartridges for the Original 45-70 Springfield? by J.S. & Pat Wolf. There?s a chapter on the sights that goes into detail; however, my question is why Buffington chose the triangular shape. He didn?t choose a rectangle, square or other shape. There?s got to be a reason but I?m not getting it.
Dick Hosmer
06-16-2021, 10:02
Perhaps a triangle gave the greatest amount of apparent open area above the notch, relative to removing the least amount of metal?
Major Tom
06-17-2021, 01:07
Whatever?! I don't mess with that sight at all. I'm sure the regular trooper didn't either.
It’s called a Field Sight.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.5 Copyright © 2025 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.