A Quick Primer on Age and Sight Picture

   02.18.13

A Quick Primer on Age and Sight Picture

Some think that life during your youth is better than it is once you gain maturity. I am not one of them. I’ve enjoyed life much more now that I have a few miles on my odometer and chips in my paint. I may not be as strong or as fast now but I’m smarter and I know how to live.

There is a downside to having some vintage on your label, though, and it relates to vision. It happens to all of us provided we live long enough. Our eyes age and the fluid in them gets a little cloudy, the muscles that shape the eye to focus get a little weaker, and the iris, the aperture that adjusts for optimum vision in different lighting conditions, gets lazy.

All this doesn’t have much effect on our vision under perfect conditions, but it contributes to problems dealing with low light and focal distance. Focal distance is critical when you shoot a gun with iron sights. We begin to have trouble reading the newspaper as we get older and the front sight seems to grow whiskers. This normally happens in our forties and it can wreak havoc with our ability to shoot well with iron sights.

A good sight picture consists of a sharp focus on the front sight, well aligned in the rear sight, and centered in the target. Even with the eyes of a teenager, the target will lose some of its sharpness due to the eye’s inability to focus on a close and a distant object at the same time. With good distance vision or corrected vision your eyes will lose the ability to focus in on the close front sight when you hit forty. This may happen so gradually you won’t notice it, but your shooting will suffer noticeably.

Many competitive shooters have known about this a long time and they often have glasses made with the correct prescription to allow seeing the front sight clearly. I learned this in my mid-forties shooting NRA High Power. I shot a service rifle and as I got older, I began to have difficulty seeing the front sight. I bought a set of Knobloch shooting glasses and had my optometrist prescribe lenses for the Knoblochs with +.25 and +.5 magnification over my normal distance prescription.

Knobloch glasses allow easy interchanging of lenses and when it came time to shoot 600 or 1,000 yards, I checked to see which looked best under the existing light conditions. This was tricky because I needed enough magnification to see the front sight well, but I also had to be able to read the six-foot number board six or 10 football fields away. The small amount of magnification made a huge difference and allowed me to call shots in the ten ring, provided I got the wind right.

The same applies to the front sight of a pistol. A sharp focus on the front sight affects not only accuracy, but the ability to fire fast follow up shots as well. Having your prescription perfect on the front sight will allow you to recover faster. When the gun fires, the best shooters maintain focus on the front sight through the shot and recoil. Most shooters go through a mental reset and this often requires a refocus on the front sight which costs time. If your prescription is optimum, you’ll be much more likely to maintain focus and the process of getting the sights back on the target will happen faster.

The trick in this is to use the minimum amount of magnification to be able to see the sight well. The focal distance should be beyond the front sight as far as is comfortable to allow the best view of the target. Normally, you can get by with more magnification in pistol shooting than rifle. In high power, the limit is the ability to read the number board. Last year at Camp Perry, I was still able to read the number board at 600 and 1,000 yards with +.75 lenses but I suspect more magnification would preclude reading the numbers 1,000 yards away.

OK, so now we know what we need for lenses, how do we get the lenses we need? Most optometrists will write you a prescription to your specifications and you can get glasses made to that prescription. Remember, you only need to change your shooting eye. You may want to get lenses made with a couple of different magnification levels like +.5 and +.75. Using interchangeable lens frames will allow you to match the prescription to your eye and light conditions for the day.

You will be surprised how easy it is to focus on the front sight and improve your shooting. You can also alter your prescription yourself and order from companies like Zenni Optical. They offer a wide variety of styles and lens colors and are economical enough to allow you to buy two or three magnification levels and colors to allow trying more or less magnification to give you the best option for the conditions you face.

Having the correct prescription will improve your shooting accuracy and speed and it isn’t rocket science. A little effort in getting your vision right will pay big dividends when you shoot with iron sights with a rifle or pistol.

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Dick Jones is an award winning outdoor writer and a member of the Southeastern Outdoor Press Association Board of Directors. He writes for four North Carolina Newspapers as well as regional and national magazines. He’s hunted and fished most of his life but shooting has been his passion. He’s a former High Master, Distinguished Rifleman, and AAA class pistol shooter. He holds four Dogs of War Medals for Team Marksmanship as shooter, captain and coach. He ran the North Carolina High Power Rifle Team for six years and the junior team two years after that. Within the last year, he’s competed in shotgun, rifle and pistol events including the National Defense Match and the Bianchi Cup. He’ll be shooting the Bianchi, the NDM, the National High Power Rifle Championship, The Rock Castle AR15.com Three Gun Championship and an undetermined sniper match this shooting season.

He lives in High Point, North Carolina with his wife Cherie who’s also an outdoor writer and the 2006 and 2011 Northeast Side by Side Women’s Shotgun Champion. Both Dick and Cherie are NRA pistol, rifle, and shotgun instructors and own Lewis Creek Shooting School.

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