Griffo1337 wrote:Hello!
Looking to get my first .22LR (I know that topic has been done to death), but I am looking to a rifle with iron/peep sights.
Alternatively, can you have sights fitted to, say, a Lithgow 101?
I want iron sights as I enjoy shooting with them, I will eventually put a scope on the rifle, but I'd like the option of iron sights.
Apologies in advance if I've used incorrect terminology
And to make it interesting, I am a left-eye dominant, left-handed shooter.
If you want to use a left-handed bolt-action your options are going to be severely limited. Iron sights can be fitted to most rifles but some are significantly more difficult, the RPR for example has a full-length rail so will take AR-15 adjustable sights very easily. Others can have aftermarket sights screwed, dovetailed, clamped, pressed on, or soldered on, but will likely require some finessing to suit the specific rifle.
If it's primarily for shooting off a rest, some lefties prefer the right-handed bolt as you don't move your firing hand to operate it. Other designs, like pump and lever are virtually ambidextrous, loading and ejection are often still set up for right-hand use. There are also straight-pull and lever-release rifled, though mainly right-handed.
Not many rifles come with iron sights nowadays, and conversely not many older rifles came with scope mounting in mind. In between, say the seventies to the nineties it was common for rifles to have irons and have dovetails or tapped holes for mounting scopes.
Ruger offer some models with sights that are quite good, and are set up with picatinny rails for optics. CZ has some rifles with irons, but tend to have dovetails for mounting optics. The Lithgow LA101 is left-handed but I don't know if they offer sights, I can't recall ever seeing them.
I wouldn't rule out older rifles either. My 1951 Sportsman 5 is a great shooter, with sights that suit me very well, but it offers no mounting for optics unless you're willing to drill and tap the action. The Brno Model 2 is a beautiful little rifle that shoots very well, and often has a dovetail. The Brno's are now made by CZ, so parts are generally still available. Even older rifles, like the Lithgow Model 12 and Remington Model 5-series rifles are still great shooters, but you may not want to drill and tap one of those for optics. Even my rifles that I only shoot with iron sights I still like to be able to mount a scope for ammunition testing. A lot of the Western style rifles, like Henry and Marlin often have Western style sights, like buckhorns, or barley corns that you may find you don't like, so it's worth trying to actually shoulder and sight down a rifle to see if it suits you. I particularly like the Ruger bead and U-notch for hunting, and a finer blade and aperture for shooting targets.
The Norinco JW25A (Chinese copy of a WW2 Brno-built version of a German training rifle) I bought recently has a pretend military rear sight that has no adjustment at all. It's sufficient for hunting and plinking but you would need to file their heights and widths to precisely zero it at a specific distance. The other Norincos tend to have very good sights though, like the JW15 (a copy of the Brno Model 2), or JW21 (copy of the Winchester 9422 lever-action) that often shoot very well.
A lot of your choice will come down to purpose, and which manufacturers offer left-handed models, sights can be sorted later.