Would the wide rear notch and narrow front sight of these sights make a difference with sight radius? For instance, would the sight picture have light bars that are perhaps be a little wide and imprecise using them on a G34?
If your eyes are still good enough for black on black sites, they’re awesome.
However, wide notch or not, those days are over for me without glasses.
Even with glasses, I prefer a high, visibility or fiber optic front site if going irons. So paint /nail polish on the front would be mandatory.
Before my eyes got older/transitioned everything to red dot. These were the onlt glock sights I used.
I really appreciate all the feedback, folks. I was a fan of these sights back in the day, but I’ve since gone blind and back, so it’s nice to reinsert myself into the stream and get some current feedback. I picked up a set for my G43, and I’ll see how they treat me. I also have a G26MOS to play with now, courtesy of another esteemed member, so I’m finally going headfirst down the dot rabbit hole as well.
Looks like I’m on a sighting hejira.
”But in the end all of these ideas just manufacture new criminals when the problem isn't a lack of criminals.” -JRB
Your best bet is probably Dawson Precision. They have several rear sight styles and have a bunch of configurations for Glock with either .135", .140", or .145" (among others) rear notches. For tritium ones, it looks like for most of the configurations they want you to call in since it might be a one-off job (which they do). They're great to deal with.
I could have sworn I've seen at least one or two other companies making some close to ~.140", give or take .005", but can't find them now. A quick glance at Warren, Heinie, and Ameriglo shows that most bracket this range at ~.125-.130" on the low end and .150-.156" on the high end for the next closest sizes. Warren has at least one .130" but most of theirs are .150". Ameriglo has a fair number at .150", though many of the tritium ones are .165". Heinie's short MOS tritium sight is .156", and most of their others are .125".
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Of course. I love dots on guns, it makes it much easier to shoot more accurately, for me, especially past 25 yards. After years, on a whim, I decided to buy a p2000 and run it with the factory dead night sights that came on it. I found that for most of my shooting, 25 yards and in, unless it was a pure accuracy drill (b8s at 25 or such) my accuracy didn't suffer much, if at all, and my times were about as fast. I am probably an average or above average shooter for this forum, being able to hold me own with many I have shot with from here for reference (besides SLG, he is by far the best pistol shooter I have been around.) The side benefits of a iron sighted gun were obvious to me also, I could carry a bigger gun 100% of the time with irons, I couldn't do the same with a red dot, even a rmr. I'm 180ish and 5 foot 9, weightlifting build, so I can make a red dot work but it does print for me in situations or clothing where a iron sighted p2000 never does (p2000sk printing with a rmr sized optic in the same holster and clothes.) So I made a decision to put a bigger gun and concealment first, some people don't or can make red dots work for 100% of their clothing and blend in, more power to them. I also don't switch guns anymore, I have carried the p2000 from that day I shot it until about 5 minutes ago when it went on my nightstand.
I have also had red dots from trijicon, aimpoint, and holosun either show up not working or broke with little use. Maybe I'm getting old but for right now, I can still see my iron sights and I'm about as good. With all of this said, I plan on spending next year with a ltt p30 with a eps carry 6 moa dot on it... smaller optic should mean better concealment? At least that is my theory.
P.S The eps carry optic window is about as big or bigger than the rmrs window because the bottom deck doesn't block the window like the rmr.