As the barrel warmed up however, accuracy started falling off. For distances from twenty-five yards to thirty-five yards (or so), I was still maintaining a fair degree of accuracy. The sight picture was obviously larger than with the standard sight aperture. The drilling out of the rear sight really made a difference at the range. After all, the rear sight is a $4 item and if destroyed would not break the bank to replace it. As I mentioned in the original review, Jeff Quinn at had drilled out the larger of the two rear sight apertures to 0.125 inch (1/8”) on his Henry AR7. The second major upgrade was to the rear sight. TASCO BKRD3022 Red Dot SightThe first of these upgrades was a Red Dot sight, which is a BKRD30/22 unit from TASCO ( ×30-22-reddot.html) that has a simple red dot, step adjustment for dot intensity, and built-on dovetail rail to fit standard 3/8″ rimfire style bases.
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