foothill17
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- Feb 22, 2010
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in this setup you are cowitnessing the red dot with the iron sights.
1. sight in your irons first
2. mount optic
3. adjust optic dot to sit just on top of the front sight post while looking through the small aperature of the rear sight assembly
4. make final elevation and windage adjustments to the red dot at the range
the advantage of this set up is that you can use a non-magnifed red dot optic for parallax free, both eyes open shooting. this allows for fast target acquistion at relatively close ranges. cowitnessing with the iron sights allows you to keep shooting if your optic fails (battery dies, breaks, mount comes loose, etc.). in addition, if you shoot while looking through the rear sight aperature the red dot may make it easier for you to place your sights on target (some guys have a hard time focusing on the front sight post and keeping it and the target clear).
hope that helps.
Nice explanation, both above.
Chuck, (aka Daddy Red Dot Death) there are some folks who have spoke about complications from having to look through the rear aperture to the red dot. How does this method work for you?
i know this question was posed to chuck s but i'm going to answer it too if you don't mind.
until i got my BUIS i would sight through the large rear sight aperature to my red dot. because i have the stock collapsed until my nose in on the charging handle, that aperature is huge and almost useless for iron sight purposes. i would also shoot over the rear sight but typically had no issue with both eyes open through the large aperature if you're stock isn't fully extended.
sorry for butting in.
Quote:
2-31. The M68 mounts directly on the integrated rail on top of M16A4 rifles and M4-series carbines
(Figure 2-23). The half-moon spacer (1, Figure 23) must be installed to raise the M68 above the front
sightpost. The Soldier's preference dictates the notch that the M68 is mounted on. Although any notch is
acceptable, testing has shown that the farther away the M68 is from the Soldier's eyes, the better his field
of view.(emphasis added.)