Air pistol optics and sighting options

Since pistol shooting is one of the most challenging of shooting endeavors, a lot of air pistol related posts include inquiries about sighting options and recommendations, and sighting choice is so pertinent to pistol-shooting success, thought I'd attach a pertinent chapter from Custom, Classic and Otherwise AWESOME AIR PISTOLS!You're welcome.

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View attachment 1556163221_10058951775cc12a95ac5c76.30188707_AP Sights pdf.pdf






 
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Shot with Open irons .... Long eye relief pistol scopes .... Short eye relief rifles scopes ... ZERO eye relief scopes such as the MTC connect.

No matter the sighting system getting stable is paramount !! and those shots taken as HAIL MARRIES seldom find there mark.



Pistols are not for everyone and too become proficient shooting one you need to invest the time and deal with the frustration.
 
Yeah I have been learning that shooting sticks are pretty cool for pistol. I never used them hunting as to me that defeats the purpose of a pistol for hunting. "light and mobile" after using my rifles shooting sticks to test out the red dot on my p700w the other day I just fell in love with the extra stability.i still wont bring it hunting but im looking to build something that i can slip over my hiking sticks to quickly convert them to shooting sticks bi pod style. Pft looks pretty cool. I wish I had a place to compete close to where i live. 
 
I shoot with open sights and optics,open sights when I am shooting standing up, optics when setting and have a rest.I have many pistol scopes,expensive ones and not so expensive...I have been using a NcSTAR lately,it is a 3x7 x32 model,I use it at 23 yds on 4 power and I am happy with it....I see no need mounting my Leupold,Burris or Nikon....so for my needs when shooting in my backyard at less than 25 yds. I give a thumbs up to that Ncstar scope.


 
I wish I could use iron sight but my eyes are not good enough. On my Walther LP400, I used a Burris Fast Fire red dot sight with a DIY mount : 

1556356476_16738844705cc41d7c8969b0.65736594_red dot on LP400 3.jpg

Very nice pistol. I'm almost there myself with the eyes. Most days I can shoot opens for a little while before loosing focus but it's almost gone now at 60. Even long sessions shooting with a scope will cause issues with me. I added a Burris Fastfire III to one of my semi auto carry pistols (first use of such on a pistol for me) but it failed so I have a Crimson Trace CTS-1200 on order since December to replace it.
 
I have been playing with my little 1377 lately (Elmer Keith style) using the front sight relative to sight radius for a MOA system. Last year I pulled it out at Randy Engel's Fun Airgun Shoot he has every year in Colo. City. I ran the ballistics in Chairgun and with a 20-yd. zero I had to aim 35 MOA or 1.2 "units" down (I had painted 1/2 the front sight white) to engage the 50-yd. buffalo silhouettes maybe 12" wide or so. I steadied the pistol off sandbags and held as accurately as possible and you can imagine my surprise as the 1st shot was a hit. 5 more shots later I had 3 hits on it. Love applying the math for longer range shooting-especially pistols.
 
Pistols are hard to shoot accurately. Very few shooters are competent with a pistol. It takes thousands of rounds a year in practice. If you you don't do the practice, you will never shoot a pistol well. All pistols come with iron sights. If you carry, you MUST practice. Mounting scopes and other sighting stuff on top makes the pistol unwieldy. You might as well buy a rifle. When sighting with iron sights, only the front sight should be in focus. The rear sight and the target will always be a blur and that's OK. Today, I can still put 5 in a tight group. At the age of 75 next month I have to use reading glasses for that front sight clarity, but it works for me.