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Help learning C-more sight


wanttolearn

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I recently purchased a 1911 pistol designed for metal plates, the pistol came with a C-more sight (Serendipity SL), standard not sideways mounting. I like the sight but i'm trying to figure out how best to use it.

I note that i seem to pick up the dot at the lower 1/3 of the field. I would have imagined that it would tend to appear centrally. I don't feel like i'm tilting the pistol but i guess i must be, can this be adjusted for?

I would imagine that one uses these sights with both eye's open, would closing one eye make a difference or would the sighting be the same regardless?

I'd sure appreciate any help as to how best to use/learn/adjust to the sight. thank you.

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Mayer, when I first got mine five years ago, it would take me

three seconds to find the dot :surprise:

Once I started to dry fire (practice the draw in my house

without ammo), it took a few weeks, but then the dot became

apparent a lot faster .

If the dot is in the lower third of the eyepiece, just raise

the muzzle a little, and it should be centered.

Takes a little practice - I also index the dot on the knob

that sticks up from the sight - visual clue as to where the

dot will appear.

:cheers:

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My best suggestion is to practice more. The C-more is much higher than iron sights, so you are probably tilting your head too far forward. A few days of practicing your draw and it should seem pretty natural. As far as both eyes open, you should be shooting that way with or without a dot. The difference is you can focus on the target instead of the sights.

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dry fire practice and drills would be the best route to take. A forum member here suggested that I practice my draw with my eyes closed, draw...bring the gun up to a firing position and open my eyes to see where my arms/hands settled my dot and adjust from there. I still do that drill religiously.

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I found its easier to find the dot if I have a target to index to. I visually focus on the target, present the gun to it and the dot appears though not as precise as I wanted to (initially). I thought it was just a fluke or "trick of the day" as I came from yrs of shooting an iron sighted S_I gun then abruptly went to a red dotted Glock w/c we all know have very different grip angles between them. But its not. In less than ayear in Open, I very very seldom lose the dot w/ this technique even in weird shooting positions. I only "lose" it if I have no target to index on. I tried it and proved it to myself and others several times. Even the new comers to the dot and Glock, I tested it w/ my Glock open w/c has a very high cmore dot because I use a Carver hunter mount. The first few times they look for the dot w/o a target they fail 100% of the time. When I suggest to look at a target of their choice and generally aim the gun on it, at leat 50% of the time they see the dot appear on the target. And w/ repetition, their confidence grow, the dot appears w/ greater frequency. So, its not just me or a peculiar ability. Try it.

Unfortunately for me, shooting Open is not just about finding the dot ;)

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An important thing to practice is acquiring the dot in unusual positions. Leaning around a wall, through a doorway, seated, crouched, etc. Even if you only ever shoot steel and don't need those positions in practice, being able to consistently find the dot under less-than-ideal conditions will help you find it under ideal conditions as well.

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  • 3 weeks later...

Monster is so right. You need to practice in every comasutra position. I thought I had mastered it then the other day you started kneeling with gun at low ready, so buzzer goes off and I start standing up and can't find the fing dot. Nope I never practiced that start. Early on I would lose it after a reload, very fustrating so stand over the bed with a belt full of mags and practice.

I didn't see it so I'll say it: "Don't short arm the gun". If you don't keep your arms extened then you will lose the dot. This happens when you crowd a port or a barricade, so keep the arms out no short arming.

I was weak and gave up on the upright mount and got a Quinn. After a couple years I picked up a gun with an upright mount and shot it just fine, so truth is now known I gave up too easy.

Edited by CocoBolo
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Dryfire and practicing your draws is the best way. I just went to a 90 degree mount as I swithch between open and irons depending on the sport(3gun and uspsa mainly) and match(ss/production only match), It was just much easier to do that with the 90 degree as it itdexed the same regardless of irons or cmore. If I shot open only there wasnt a problem with the verticle mount but switching it took a bit to adjust

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After practicing quite a bit I still find the dot on the initial draw only 75% of the time. With my irons and a large FO front sight I am still quicker to get on target and fire my first shot. With the dot I seem to bobble trying to find the dot for the first shot which kills my times.

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After practicing quite a bit I still find the dot on the initial draw only 75% of the time. With my irons and a large FO front sight I am still quicker to get on target and fire my first shot. With the dot I seem to bobble trying to find the dot for the first shot which kills my times.

Give the 90 degree a try. It puts that glass right there where you iron sights are and no more searching for the dot when switching between irons and cmore

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An important thing to practice is acquiring the dot in unusual positions. Leaning around a wall, through a doorway, seated, crouched, etc. Even if you only ever shoot steel and don't need those positions in practice, being able to consistently find the dot under less-than-ideal conditions will help you find it under ideal conditions as well.

This bit me HARD when I got my RMRed G34 and shot it at a match after a few days practice at home. Stand and deliver it was great! Around cover IDPA style was great........that plate rack through a low port and sweat in my eyes.......not much fun. You figure out real quick what you need to work on with picking up the dot.

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