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  2. C79 optical sight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C79_optical_sight

    Two adjustment knobs are used to secure the base to the receiver. A bore-sighting device is usually used to roughly zero the sight before a first-time shooter takes it to the range. Adjustments come in 0.25-mil clicks (one mil equals 10 cm at a range of 100 m, so each click adjusts the sight by 2.5 cm at 100 m). Sighting in a C79 sight is ...

  3. AN/PAS-13 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AN/PAS-13

    The AN/PAS-13B comes in two variants, the medium AN/PAS-13B(V)1 and the heavy AN/PAS-13B(V)2. The medium has a smaller telescope attached, resulting in a zoom of 5x compared to the heavy's 10x. Both AN/PAS-13Bs have programmable reticles, allowing the user to match the reticle to the weapon system the sight will be mounted on.

  4. Telescopic sight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telescopic_sight

    The scope base is the attachment interface on the rifle's receiver, onto which the scope rings or scope mount are fixed. Early telescopic sights almost all have the rings that are fastened directly into tapped screw holes on the receiver, hence having no additional scope base other than the receiver top itself.

  5. Diopter sight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diopter_sight

    The diopter sight is easy to use and usually allows for very accurate aiming, because a relative long sighting line can be used. A long sighting line helps to reduce eventual angle errors and will, in case the sight has an incremental adjustment mechanism, adjust in smaller increments when compared to a further identical shorter sighting line.

  6. Sight (device) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sight_(device)

    Mark III free gun reflector sight mk 9 variant Another type of optical sight is the reflector (or " reflex ") sight , a generally non- magnifying optical device that allows the user to look through a glass element and see a reflection of an illuminated aiming point or some other image superimposed on the field of view . [ 7 ]

  7. Gyro gunsight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyro_gunsight

    To set range the dial adjusts the reticle size to match target wingspan. Currently set to the Junkers Ju 88 , it ranged in size from the large Fw 200 Condor to the small Messerschmitt Bf 109 . A gyro gunsight (G.G.S.) is a modification of the non-magnifying reflector sight in which target lead (the amount of aim-off in front of a moving target ...

  8. Precision-guided firearm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Precision-guided_firearm

    The three main technologies employed for long-range shooting—the bolt-action rifle, telescopic rifle scope and machined cartridge ammunition—were developed in the nineteenth century. The first bolt-action rifle was produced in 1824 by the German firearms inventor Johann Nicolaus von Dreyse. The first documented telescopic rifle sight was ...

  9. Reflector sight - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reflector_sight

    Reflector sights as aircraft gun-sights have many advantages. The pilot/gunner need not position their head to align the sight line precisely as they did in two-point mechanical sights, head position is only limited to that determined by the optics in the collimator, mostly by the diameter of the collimator lens.