Painting K Frame Fixed Sights

1madss

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I have had a 10-6 for a while now and just picked up a 13-3 3" last week and have problems seeing the fixed sights. I specifically bought a 13 with a pinned front sight with the intention on replacing it with something else, probably a FO sight, but was still going to have problems seeing the rear. I decided in the mean time that I would give sight paint another try. I had tried the painted front sight in the past, but while it was some help, I still really struggled to see the sights even in good light.

While playing around with a three dot setup I ended up with a three square instead. It works great! I can actually see this with out glasses even in fairly low light. I just line up the two white squares with the center red. It is very easy to use the top and bottom edges of the squares to quickly center the sights. Best of all it was free and wipes right off with a little acetone.

This is hardly ground breaking, I just thought I would share what I have found to really help with my issues in seeing these sights.

I went ahead and did this to my 10-6 as well as my H&R Sportsman. Hope to make it out to the range this week to give them a real test. :D
M13-3Paintedsights.jpg


What the sight picture looks like. Sorry for the mediocre shot, this pic was a real pain to try and get.
M13-3SightPicture.jpg


I'm curious to see what others have come up for fixed sights. I had done a fair amount of searching for options prior to getting the M13 to make sure I had some choices, but had not seen much other than replacing the front sight with one of a couple of blades types, mostly FO.
 
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I've painted several guns the same way, and different colors work for different eyes, it's worth a little trial and error. Pink seems to work best for me in low-light conditions, but a bright yellow is also a good choice.

What would help even more is extra-large rear sight notches!
 
For years I used the little bottles of Testor's model paint in various hi- viz colors.
A couple years back, found the one I had stored away had dried up. Went to Wallyworld to replace it.
No such thing in stock anymore. Kids don't build models anymore.

Ended up in the 'crafts' section with a bottle of blaze orange that will do about 6000 front sights.
 
For years I used the little bottles of Testor's model paint in various hi- viz colors.
A couple years back, found the one I had stored away had dried up. Went to Wallyworld to replace it.
No such thing in stock anymore. Kids don't build models anymore.

Ended up in the 'crafts' section with a bottle of blaze orange that will do about 6000 front sights.

You have to find one of those Hobby shops that sell the little train sets and models. They should have Testor's. Although, these types of shops don't seem long for this world.
 
1madss: I painted the front sight on my model 10 white. I never thought of painting the rear like that. Looks good.

Old Corp: Try Hobby Lobby for Testor's paint.

A friend of mine actually prefers to buy the light-activated paint so he can "install" night sights on his pistols easily. I agree with the suggestion of a hobby store such as Hobby Lobby.

By the way, as I went to Mizzou, I love your screen name and logo!

As my wife went to KU, I always have to turn the screen if she comes around when I am reading one of your posts.

LOL :)
 
For years I used the little bottles of Testor's model paint in various hi- viz colors.
A couple years back, found the one I had stored away had dried up. Went to Wallyworld to replace it.
No such thing in stock anymore. Kids don't build models anymore.

Ended up in the 'crafts' section with a bottle of blaze orange that will do about 6000 front sights.

I found an assortment of Testor's at Hobby Lobby.
 
Testor's Fluorescent Green (rear) and Fluorescent Orange (front) paint from Hobby Lobby. Both were applied over a coat of white fingernail polish then topped off with a clearcoat. Sorry for the photo quality - not easy to photograph the rear and front sights together.

CfCfEjz.jpg

mx4IRAs.jpg
 
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Sight Paint

They actually make a product specifically for this, sold by Birchwood Casey, a three "pen" set (orange, white and green).

I've had mine for about 10 or 12 years, still doing a great job. I find you don't need to mask your sight, the paint is thick enough to flow right on w/o streaking or running, if you prime the thing first, by pressing on a piece of cardboard.
 
Sorry for the photo quality - not easy to photograph the rear and front sights together.
Shoot from farther back from the subject, use as small an aperture as possible (if your camera does that) for a greater depth of field. Then crop the image to enlarge it for detail.

I have had a 10-6 for a while now and just picked up a 13-3 3" last week and have problems seeing the fixed sights..... I decided in the mean time that I would give sight paint another try. I had tried the painted front sight in the past, but while it was some help, I still really struggled to see the sights even in good light.

While playing around with a three dot setup I ended up with a three square instead. It works great! I can actually see this with out glasses even in fairly low light. I just line up the two white squares with the center red. It is very easy to use the top and bottom edges of the squares to quickly center the sights. Best of all it was free and wipes right off with a little acetone.
I did something very similar on my M58. I used Testors enamel red on the front blade, and flat white on the back side of the rear notch.
 
With a little practice ... you can "paint" nice round white dots with a BIC White-Out Correction Pen ... get a new one , or one that has plenty fluid , Squeeze the barrel and then press the pen roller ball where you want the dot, keeping a constant amout of pressure on the barrel while pressing the ball down . It takes a little practice to get the squeezing pressure and point pressure just right ... but soon you will be able to paint nice round flat white dots anywhere you want them .
Just grab a WhiteOut pen and try it on a sheet of dark paper ... making "Dots" gets a lot easier than you think possible ... and a new or little used pen works best , the ink supply is greater and flows easier than when half dried up .
Gary
 
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