Anyone have any opinions on sights? Ive stuck with the front bead on my old BPS but was thinking of mabee trying other options. Bad as well as good experiences are always appreciated.!
I never thought I'd like a red dot style sight. But I've used a Vortex Venom for the last couple of years and wish I'd have went to one sooner.
I used a scope for years until it gave up the ghost. Since then I've switched to a dot sight. My latest is a Trijicon RMR. Expensive, but rugged and reliable, and doesn't use batteries. Most of my friends who use just a dot, and even fiber optics usually miss at least one bird a year due to not having their head all the way down on the stock. Optics negate that problem, and they give you a focused sight picture. I will never go back to the front bead. :fud: :turkey:
If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Bead is best!
Second best is a good quality dot sight solidly mounted. You should look through them before you buy to make sure the dot is clear enough for you and the bright enough to use in bright sunlight.
Burris fast fire 3 on all my turkey guns.
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I've used a red dot scope-type for many years...not the holographic Burris type. I prefer it because the lenses are covered. With the holographic type the lenses are exposed to the weather and, particularly, sunlight reflection. But, in either event, IMO the single dot is the main feature.
I posted a similar question early in the season... Before learning about this site, I had heard of optics and scopes for turkey hunting, but had no idea how many people actually used them...
As a wing-shooter, I will stick with the bead.... Honestly, although I have missed, shooting a turkey on the ground at close range with a shotgun is not much of a challenge (as far as the actual shooting). I kinda' like being a bit nervous shooting at a bird, and I sorta' relish the relief when they start flopping.
I fiddled with some optics, and for me, I think I might be tempted to take longer shots, or underestimate range. Looking at a turkey decoy at 50 yards through optics, looks like an easy kill (although I know better).
Two of my three birds this season, I had to mount and shoot the gun quickly to make the shot... I know with practice this can be done with optics (and some sights/optics are better than others), but I found it far more difficult with optics than a plain bead.
If I were missing turkeys with a bead, I might consider optics... Or practice...
I used a red/green dot for several years but got tired of replacing batteries when I forgot to turn it off. Replaced it with a compact fixed 4 power scope and never looked back.
Beads don't require battery's and I've never broke one
Quote from: rooster on May 30, 2018, 02:04:44 PM
Anyone have any opinions on sights? Ive stuck with the front bead on my old BPS but was thinking of mabee trying other options. Bad as well as good experiences are always appreciated.!
I'm using a trijicon fiber rmr. Small and tough. No batteries needed. Only con besides price is if you are in a blind or shady area the dot can get a little washed out aiming into a real bright area
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I liked a red dot until I had the sun at my back a gobbler @40 yds and the sun was bright and I couldn't see my sight! I vote bead or some kind of rifle sight!
Burris FF3 8mil dot, no complaints and no problems.
First time and year I`ve ever used optics of any kind on a shotgun. I`m most assuredly a red dot convert, particularly so since you`re aiming and not pointing.
Tru Glo red/green dot for me. I've used it for several years and really like it. Batteries come 2 per pack. I replace battery each season and keep a spare in my vest and have never had one run out during the season.
I was fine with beads and clamp-on sights until my eyesight started to go. Now, I'm using FastFires and SPARCs.
I've used the truglo mag gobble dots ($45) version for years. These or the Williams fire sights are the only ones I'll use. Otherwise I'd opt for some sort of optics of which I have no experience.
would not hunt a gun without a red dot for turkey
I also use the Truglo mag gobble dot and wouldn't hunt turkey without some type of sight or optic on my gun. I have been thinking about trying a red dot of some kind to see how I like it.
I use beads, fiber optic rifle sights and burris FF3. If POA/POI is an issue then sights are a must. Tight patterning guns will benefit from sights and red dot reflex sights will provide you a good field of view. There is always potential for damage if you are rough on equipment and batteries to manage on red dots. A good hunting pattern from a gun that shoots true with beads is very hard to mess up.
40 years ago I had a single bead and on the end of a 36" barrel it looked the size of a beer can. Next few turkey gun's had twin beads. Next one's had adjustable fiber rifle sights. The latest one I pack has a Leupold Delta Point Pro 2.5 MOA red dot. Its rugged has adjustable brightness level's will power it's off when motionless for 5 min to save battery life and powers back on with minimal movement.
I started with a bead, then went to fiber optic clamp on sights because of poi/poa problems. Then I went to red dot sights because my eyes got just old enough and couldn't line up the sights without wearing a pair of "cheaters." Had great success with the red dots, but made the switch to a low powered scope this season. Love it! Nice to be able to focus it for a crisp sight picture, and the model I got has 6" of eye relief, so no worries about crawling the stock and getting whacked in the eye. The scope adds a little bit of weight, but the gun is pretty lightweight to begin with, so it still weighs about the same as my bps with fiber optics. I still think an open dot like the fastfire 3, and red dots like it are probably about the perfect turkey gun sighting system, but I am really liking the scope right now. I am going to put it thru it's paces the next couple of seasons and see how it stacks up.