To any of you blokes (and sheilas) who's eyes might be getting a bit old and find that the standard sights on handguns are getting so hard to see, and align properly and are getting a bit frustrated (I was bigtime), maybe think about giving these things a go.
My everyday carry pistol has a pretty short sight radius, and even with the excellent tritium sights it was getting very hard to get a good accurate shot.
Stuff at arms length is never an issue though, sick stock or larger than normal pouch finds no worries, but heaps of shots are at 10-15m and I like them to be where I want the bullets to land because I don't like causing distress or followups if possible.
My pistol didn't have a slide cut to take a sight, so I ordered one from Nioa that slots into the dovetail, and has the option of a sight to be attached to the rear of the Delta-Point, which I chose as I had one on a very abused pump 308 that gets around the place and it never ever needs rezeroing, and turns off when you put it down. I wasn't game to set up the mill to do it because the slide is rock-hard and I'm not sure that I can tap the two 4mm metric holes it needs to direct-mount super-low. I was dubious that the dovetail was enough to do the mount with the slide slamming back and forth.
Anyway, after zeroing it and being super pleased with how accurate it has made this short little 9mm, I've used it a few times in the paddocks but over the last few weeks had some real stacks where I've fallen on my arse on the gun when pulling pipes and putting in new troughs for new paddocks we're setting up.
Today, I fell backwards dragging a 250m length of poly over a log and landed right on a big rock and crack, on the pistol.
So, I thought, bet this is out a bit, because as well as that it's bashed the sight against steel posts, tractor implements and heaps of other stuff.
Thank goodness these Delta-Points have that spring steel guard that sits with clearance over the sight window, a bloody great idea for a paddock gun.
As it is the phosphate finish on the guard has been scraped off on the edges already.
So, it was 15 shots, a full mag as is always in it, at the target in the yard at 10m offhand.
I must say I was unrushed, slow fire with single action definitely not double-action as is the usual first pull out of the holster.
Must say, if any of you guys are getting older, need to land your shots exactly whether for scores on paper or between the eyes of a troubling animal when you can't carry a rifle, these things are unreal.
Especially for such a short barrel and for PPU 124gn HP cheap ammo.
And I am not the world's best shot. Or at anything else for that matter but have a go.
So there's no way I could've done this with 15 shots at 10m freehand with irons. Gives me heaps more confidence.
Only thing that is a bit of a bastard is that, when carrying the thing all day under a coat or a shirt hanging out (to try and save it from too many hard hits, the screen facing up in the holster fills up with lint and dust, so much so that at the end of the day it needs a squirt from an air blower before putting it away.
If anyone has a solution to this, I'm all ears. Never thought about this when using fixed irons.



