Perhaps the paragraph that should have been included in the book. Thus the Prussian title.
Page 135 holds the seed. I didn't bother growing it. Might as well.
First, the binary thinking thing. Half the population is wired that way. It has advantages and disadvantages. "Would you like a piece of Apple or Pumpkin pie?" Binary thinking provides two choices. Given it's two bits there are really four:In moving to that loading I wonder if the ordnance officers considered the inverse?"
1) No pie
2) Apple
3) Pumpkin
4) Both
Then the creative types start thinking outside of the box. "Neither, I want Blueberry. Do you have that?" "Yes, we do." Now there are eight, not six, choices.
It often boils down to having to be one thing. Because of binary. "They changed from the 1898 back to the 1896 sight because of the cartridge return." Accepted wisdom. In fact it's probably somewhat true. Except it's bunkus.
If the hot loading was the problem, why not just fix the 1898 bases? Make new ones?
When they went to the hotter cartridge every 1896 sight was automatically off. Did they go back and fix that?
The original 1896 sight was miscalibrated. Did they go back and fix those when they discovered that?
"They changed from the 1898 back to the 1896 sight because of the cartridge return." Is probably true. It's also bunkus. They'd have fixed the 1898s and, like seen with the 1896s, ignored the wrong ones. They already had done this once.
They dropped the 1898 because they wanted an altered "Buffington." On March 29, 1899, General Daniel Flagler shuffled off the mortal coil. His replacement? General Addlebrain Buffington.
That's the key.
In November 1901 Addlebrain moves on. Crozier is appointed. Back to the revised 1898.
In 1905, that incredible example of a human being, Blunt, moves it back to the 1901. Why did Crozier buy into that? "Rod bayonet fiasco."
In 1917 they were going to change it once again.
Regardless, rear sight soup is quite the minestrone.
Now, before we get too wedded to the 1898 base being completely wrong for the 1902, let's go back to those points:
If the hot loading was the problem, why not just fix the 1898 bases? Make new ones?
When they went to the hotter cartridge every 1896 sight was automatically off. Did they go back and fix that?
The original 1896 sight was miscalibrated. Did they go back and fix those when they discovered that?
That third point. The early 1896s were miscalibrated. In rebuild did they toss them or reuse them?
Hmmmm.