I'm sure this is not shocking for some of you, but it surprised the heck out of me and now I don't know what to do about it.
I've been saving ammunition by using a cool red laser bore sighter for quite a few years. Considering how inept I am at initially sighting in a new firearm, this has made a huge impact on both my perceived accuracy and the amount of ammo expended on sighting in.
That is, until my latest toy... a cheap reflex sight. It uses a red reticle, and I think the glass must be coated with something that allows red to be reflected on the inside. This seems to be preventing the color red from passing from the muzzle end to my eye.
Here's how that thought occurred to me:
I waited until almost dark the other night, and sat on my deck with the sight mounted on one of my .22 rifles. My yard is about the same distance as the range where I shoot, and there's a tree at the end for me to aim at. I turn the laser on, turn the sight on, and all I can see is the sight reticle. I thought maybe my old-man bifocals were playing tricks on me, so I adjusted the sight up and down to see if I could get that telltale halo from seeing too dots at once.
No such luck, so I turned the sight off completely. STILL no laser dot on the tree. I lift my head up so I'm looking over the sight, and there it is. Look through the sight, and it's gone.
So, what's the secret? Can I take a sheet of colored paper and tape it to the tree, to change the color of the dot? Or, is there another way (aside from just taking the rifle to the range and sighting it in the old fashioned way)?