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Started by eminart, March 10, 2014, 03:24:28 PM
QuoteThe current sights are indeed just clamped onto the rib. I was able to use a soft wood popsicle stick clipped off straight to push up along the clamp and work it off.
QuoteI also agree that Mossberg is not putting much into these sights they are using. I really think you would be happier once you replace them with aftermarket sights such as Tru Glo Magnum Gobble Dot Pro Series or the new Tru Point Extreme or Williams fire sight or an optic.
QuoteIt was explained to me that the sights were like that on purpose so that out to 50 yards with a turkey load you could hold on the base of the neck and kill your bird. This was so your target was always in sight and not overed up by the front sight. I went out and drew a to scale turkey head and neck. With the lower neck hold it was perfect. Even close shots were right where they were supposed to be. It impacts much higher with the lighter loads
QuoteWhen it was new my 835 shot high. The sights are clamp fit on the rib. I took off the front sight and cut a piece of thin flexible refrigerator magnet to fit between the sight and rib which raised up the front sight and lowered the P.O.I.. Now my sights are dead on. Ive hunted with this gun now for several years and the sight has never came off.
Quote from: RAY on March 10, 2014, 06:15:10 PMI'm just throwing this out there. But did the gun come with different size stock shims? And would adding these help with it shooting high at all?
Quote from: eminart on March 11, 2014, 07:53:58 AMQuoteIt was explained to me that the sights were like that on purpose so that out to 50 yards with a turkey load you could hold on the base of the neck and kill your bird. This was so your target was always in sight and not overed up by the front sight. I went out and drew a to scale turkey head and neck. With the lower neck hold it was perfect. Even close shots were right where they were supposed to be. It impacts much higher with the lighter loads Really? I'm certainly no shotgun ballistics expert, but this seems very unlikely to me. Different loads are going to impact differently, but surely not to this extreme? And, I just can't see a "game load" shooting 10" high at 25 yards and that being by design. I was always taught to hold a couple of inches below the head, because that's where you want the center of your pattern to be. Also, I did discover last night that the rear sight wasn't seated all the way down on one side. I don't think that will fix the entire problem, but maybe it will help.
Quote from: mightyjoeyoung on March 11, 2014, 12:45:39 PMReally, really. My $1500 SBE II shot almost a foot high at 30 yards! Emailed Benelli and their response was just that. 60/40 pattern and that they only guaranteed poi to poa within +/- 6" elevation and +/- 4" for windage.
Quote from: mightyjoeyoung on March 11, 2014, 12:45:39 PMA shim change, and yes, you can buy them for the 835, was all it took to bring poi back down and though I run it with a red dot sight for turkey, its dead nuts with just the rid for everything else.
Quote from: mightyjoeyoung on March 11, 2014, 12:45:39 PMI would recommend either pickng up a set of better, adjustable sights or mount a sight of some kind d as the 835 is already drilled n tapped...
Quote from: eminart on March 11, 2014, 02:06:22 PMQuote from: mightyjoeyoung on March 11, 2014, 12:45:39 PMReally, really. My $1500 SBE II shot almost a foot high at 30 yards! Emailed Benelli and their response was just that. 60/40 pattern and that they only guaranteed poi to poa within +/- 6" elevation and +/- 4" for windage.I'm not trying to be argumentative, but just because it's all they'll guarantee doesn't mean it's what a shotgun is supposed to do. Why would it ever be desirable for a turkey gun to shoot a foot high? Quote from: mightyjoeyoung on March 11, 2014, 12:45:39 PMA shim change, and yes, you can buy them for the 835, was all it took to bring poi back down and though I run it with a red dot sight for turkey, its dead nuts with just the rid for everything else. How do shims in the stock change the poi when using rifle sights? I'm open to explanations, but I just don't see how the laws of physics allow it. Quote from: mightyjoeyoung on March 11, 2014, 12:45:39 PMI would recommend either pickng up a set of better, adjustable sights or mount a sight of some kind d as the 835 is already drilled n tapped...I'm definitely going to put some better sights on it sooner or later. Even if I get the ones on it adjusted to shoot right, I don't like them. The rear sight looks like it's one snagged branch away from being bent at a 90 degree angle.
Quote from: eminart on March 11, 2014, 10:02:18 AMQuoteWhen it was new my 835 shot high. The sights are clamp fit on the rib. I took off the front sight and cut a piece of thin flexible refrigerator magnet to fit between the sight and rib which raised up the front sight and lowered the P.O.I.. Now my sights are dead on. Ive hunted with this gun now for several years and the sight has never came off.Funny, I was trying to think of a material to use for that same thing yesterday. Flexible magnet is a good idea. How thin is "thin"? I don't know how high I'll need to raise the front sight to drop the poi as much as I need. But, if the shim is too thick, it will have to be held down with screws because the front sight won't be able to clamp it to the rib.