shooter115 wrote:It's all personal preference, but by far the most popular sighting system for a 3-gun shotgun is a vent rib with a fiber optic front bead.
sgruenhagen44 wrote:shooter115 wrote:It's all personal preference, but by far the most popular sighting system for a 3-gun shotgun is a vent rib with a fiber optic front bead.
Yea, I was going to say... Why do people even use rear sights. At one three gun I went to, they had 100 yard slug targets. NEver shot slugs out of my gun. aLL I had was a bead. Every single target I had a failure to neutralize but I tell ya what I was damn happy to hit all of them. Correct me if I'm wrong but wouldn't that be a pretty extreme stage for shot gun in a three gun match? I'm a pheasant hunter keep in mind, but it seems like it would be a waste of time AIMING at steel and clays.
shooter115 wrote:sgruenhagen44 wrote:shooter115 wrote:It's all personal preference, but by far the most popular sighting system for a 3-gun shotgun is a vent rib with a fiber optic front bead.
Yea, I was going to say... Why do people even use rear sights. At one three gun I went to, they had 100 yard slug targets. NEver shot slugs out of my gun. aLL I had was a bead. Every single target I had a failure to neutralize but I tell ya what I was damn happy to hit all of them. Correct me if I'm wrong but wouldn't that be a pretty extreme stage for shot gun in a three gun match? I'm a pheasant hunter keep in mind, but it seems like it would be a waste of time AIMING at steel and clays.
Not really. Pretty important to know your slug zeros out to 100 yards.
shooter115 wrote:Shawski wrote:Element arms in Becker has all the stuff you'll need. Plus you can check it out in person. And btw, running the offset irons puts you in open class.
Plus one on Element Arms.
And BTW Offset iron's do NOT put you in open class. Running two optics (meaning a variable scope and a red dot) put's you in open. Personally I don't care for them though.
Tough to beat an M2. If you can borrow one set up for 3-gun by all means do it. If you want to get in on the cheap to try it out another great option is to look for a used Nova with a 24-26" VR barrel (can usualy find them for $200, buy the +6 or +7 Nordic extension and call it good, you don't need anything else.
Nothing wrong with starting out with a basic carbine. If you decide to get more serious down the road you can always just change out the complete upper or swap out parts.
Shawski wrote:shooter115 wrote:Shawski wrote:Element arms in Becker has all the stuff you'll need. Plus you can check it out in person. And btw, running the offset irons puts you in open class.
Plus one on Element Arms.
And BTW Offset iron's do NOT put you in open class. Running two optics (meaning a variable scope and a red dot) put's you in open. Personally I don't care for them though.
Tough to beat an M2. If you can borrow one set up for 3-gun by all means do it. If you want to get in on the cheap to try it out another great option is to look for a used Nova with a 24-26" VR barrel (can usualy find them for $200, buy the +6 or +7 Nordic extension and call it good, you don't need anything else.
Nothing wrong with starting out with a basic carbine. If you decide to get more serious down the road you can always just change out the complete upper or swap out parts.
Not what I meant. Offsets plus an optic put you in Open class. No point in having offsets all by themselves.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests