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  2. FN Five-seven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FN_Five-seven

    The Five-seven has a sight radius of 178 mm (7.0 in); the pistol is currently offered with either adjustable sights or fixed sights. [ 8 ] [ 11 ] The "three-dot" type adjustable sights consist of a 2.9-mm (0.12 in) square notch rear and a 3.6-mm (0.14 in) blade front, which has a height of 9.2 mm (0.36 in). [ 11 ]

  3. Benelli Kite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benelli_Kite

    The Benelli Kite features micrometric rear sight adjustment with four settings: 1 click = 1 mm windage (left/right adjustment) at 10 metres. 1 click = 2 mm elevation (up/down adjustment) at 10 metres. The sight aperture is adjustable by lever and screw.

  4. Iron sights - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_sights

    With tangent sights, the rear sight is often used to adjust the elevation, and the front the windage. The M16A2 later M16 series rifles have a dial adjustable range calibrated rear sight, and use an elevation adjustable front sight to "zero" the rifle at a given range. The rear sight is used for windage adjustment and to change the zero range.

  5. RPD machine gun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPD_machine_gun

    The rear sight is marked in 100 meter increments from 100 to 1,000 meters. The rear sight is adjusted for windage using a knob on the left side of the rear sight. Because the front sight of the RPD must be partially disassembled in order to adjust windage, in practice the front sight would have been zeroed for windage and then locked in place.

  6. Sighting in - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sighting_in

    These circle targets are especially suitable for peep sights, aperture sights, dot reticles, and bead front sights; and are most useful when the apparent diameter of that sight feature matches the apparent diameter of the contrasting circle at the selected distance to target. Firearms with blade front sights and notch rear sights may reduce ...

  7. Milliradian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milliradian

    A milliradian (SI-symbol mrad, sometimes also abbreviated mil) is an SI derived unit for angular measurement which is defined as a thousandth of a radian (0.001 radian). ). Milliradians are used in adjustment of firearm sights by adjusting the angle of the sight compared to the barrel (up, down, left, or