E.Shell
Ultimate Member
Nope.Might be way off here, but you might want to raise the back sight.
It would.I'm a bit confused. It shoots high, and I need to raise the rear sight? Would that make it to shoot even higher?
Nope.No, lowering it would.
Then you need a taller front sight, to force the muzzle lower.The rear sight has been adjusted all the way down already.
As I see it, either filing off the rear sight U-notch or raising the front sight post. But the rear sight U-notch is quite shallow already, and raising the front sight is even harder (need to find an iron sight base with the same foot print, but slightly taller).
Yes, but not how you are thinking. </No Country For Old Men>Problem Identified.
Nope, that just makes it shoot higher.Just raise the rear sight.
Nope.Like I said I could be totally off base, but to me it would seem if you raise the rear sight, you would lower the muzzle to line up.
I like the way you think.Either you raise the front or lower the rear, the same is achieved: lower point of impact.
Move the rear sight down to lower your point of impact.Your timing is perfect. I was finally able to shoot the Pathfinder earlier today for the first time. I was using Norma Tac-22 and my experience was exactly like yours, it was consistently about 2" too high.
I'm going to take the advice from this thread and move the rear sight and try again tomorrow.
If the rear sight won't go down any further and the impact point is still high, you need a taller front sight.
Another suggestion: "High Speed" ammo typically makes a pistol shoot a little lower because it escapes the barrel before recoil can raise it too far. There's a chance your pistols might zero if you use ".22LR Hi-Speeds".