I inherited a 1969 model 41 with 7 3/8" barrel w/compensator.
It did not have the rear sights but my dad found them buried in a junk drawer and gave them to me.
I basically wanted to sight the gun in and just make sure it functioned okay. I had one misfire where the primer was dented. The second time it went off. The other 49 shells went just fine.
I have a Ruger Mark 1 that I like to shoot, but this Model 41 is far superior. Unbelievable. I had it sighted in within 15 rounds and then I was shooting old shotgun cases off a bench 30 feet away with iron sights. My last shot picked off a fallen shotgun cartridge facing me with the primer, so what is that, about the size of a quarter? I hit it square. That left me in awe of what this pistol can do, even if it was luck....
Wonderful trigger, wonderful sights. Now I'm not sure if I'll get a red dot for it or not. Maybe just some more precise iron sights. I wonder if someone makes something like olympic micrometer sights for a pistol?
It did not have the rear sights but my dad found them buried in a junk drawer and gave them to me.
I basically wanted to sight the gun in and just make sure it functioned okay. I had one misfire where the primer was dented. The second time it went off. The other 49 shells went just fine.
I have a Ruger Mark 1 that I like to shoot, but this Model 41 is far superior. Unbelievable. I had it sighted in within 15 rounds and then I was shooting old shotgun cases off a bench 30 feet away with iron sights. My last shot picked off a fallen shotgun cartridge facing me with the primer, so what is that, about the size of a quarter? I hit it square. That left me in awe of what this pistol can do, even if it was luck....
Wonderful trigger, wonderful sights. Now I'm not sure if I'll get a red dot for it or not. Maybe just some more precise iron sights. I wonder if someone makes something like olympic micrometer sights for a pistol?