1917 sighting problem

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  • Embalmer
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 932

    #1

    1917 sighting problem

    Finally got my eddystone with mintyoriginal barrel to the range today. With front sight drifted all way to left, is still hitting right of aim by about 6-7". It's grouped tight, just can't zero without Kentucky windage. There any way to fix this to line up right?
    Last edited by Embalmer; 05-06-2013, 01:53.
  • Kurt
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2011
    • 488

    #2
    I think you would want to drift the front sight to the right, not the left if your hitting to the right of aim.

    Kurt
    As the late Turner Kirkland was fond of saying, "If you want good oats, you have to pay the price. If you'll take oats that have already been through the horse, those come cheaper."

    Comment

    • ebeeby
      Senior Member
      • May 2012
      • 687

      #3
      Originally posted by Kurt
      I think you would want to drift the front sight to the right, not the left if your hitting to the right of aim.

      Kurt
      +1 - move the sight the other way.
      "Socialism is the Philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy. Its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery." ~Winston Churchill

      Comment

      • Embalmer
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2009
        • 932

        #4
        Hmmm ok I'll try that. Still have doubt that distance will be able to zero completely, let alone without sight being completely one way or other. Will try again tomorrow and report findings.


        Thanks!

        Comment

        • Kurt
          Senior Member
          • Nov 2011
          • 488

          #5
          If your shooting 100 yards, you'd get about 3"-4" of movement for every blade width you move the front sight.

          Good luck

          Kurt
          As the late Turner Kirkland was fond of saying, "If you want good oats, you have to pay the price. If you'll take oats that have already been through the horse, those come cheaper."

          Comment

          • Embalmer
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2009
            • 932

            #6
            Well drifted the sight as far right as I could without it falling off the barrel. Hits pretty much dead on, just really annoying the sight has to be that far over to hit.center mass.

            Comment

            • joem
              Senior Member, Deceased
              • Aug 2009
              • 11835

              #7
              The only other option would be to have a smith index the barrel slightly. That may be really tough to do without damage to the receiver.

              Comment

              • John Sukey
                Very Senior Member - OFC Deceased
                • Aug 2009
                • 12224

                #8
                Another thought. The stock may have warped a bit over the years and is bearing on one side of the barrel. Take a slip of paper, wrap it around the barrel, You should be able to slide it from one end of the barrel to the other while it is in the stock

                Comment

                • Kurt
                  Senior Member
                  • Nov 2011
                  • 488

                  #9
                  I would check a couple things. First, is the rear sight ladder etc Eddy Stone? i.e., was it changed at some point. Another thing to look at is the front sight, again, changed? Is the front sight a post or a blade?
                  The reasoning for the questions is I believe the 17's were targeted when original, but not so when rebuilt and put into storage and I don't think your's would have been acceptable if original.
                  I'm not sure how hard it would be to tweak the rear sight ladder one way or another, but something to check and make sure it hasn't.
                  On some of my 17's, I have filled the peep hole with JB weld and drilled a smaller hole than the original. You can favor the hole to one side which would bring your front sight back some, not sure how much off hand. You could find a cheap Parker Hale sight for it!
                  As the late Turner Kirkland was fond of saying, "If you want good oats, you have to pay the price. If you'll take oats that have already been through the horse, those come cheaper."

                  Comment

                  • M1Garandy
                    Senior Member
                    • Aug 2009
                    • 611

                    #10
                    Originally posted by joem
                    The only other option would be to have a smith index the barrel slightly. That may be really tough to do without damage to the receiver.
                    What about making a front sight key with an offset (provided everything else checks out)?

                    Comment

                    • Embalmer
                      Senior Member
                      • Aug 2009
                      • 932

                      #11
                      was rearsenaled due to the 3-km(?) stamp on stock, but only parts swapped that I found were the bolt body is a usmc, rest of parts on bolt eddystone, trigger guard and floor plate winchester. everything else is eddystone on the gun. front sight is blade. ill try the paper trick today. would be ashame if thats the issue, as is a really nice eddystone stock with minimal dings.

                      Comment

                      • chuckindenver
                        Senior Member
                        • Sep 2009
                        • 3005

                        #12
                        sounds like the barrel is out of index...can be fixed...
                        if it aint broke...fix it till it finally is.

                        Comment

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