Clapp on Handguns: Bullseye Shooting and Black Sights

by
posted on February 14, 2017
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
mkivtarget_lede.jpg

Old-fashioned Bullseye shooting—NRA Outdoor Pistol—is my choice for the first type of handgun competition that a new shooter should take up. That's because bullseye is pure marksmanship, a game that develops great self-discipline. It is a grand old sport, with all kinds of time-honored rituals. One of them was the procedure by which the competitor blackened or smoked his sights. 

Most commonly in the 1960s, this was done with a carbide lamp, the same device a miner clipped to the front of his helmet for light. Everybody had one of these little pots, into which he placed a few stones of carbide and spit. A sparking device ignited the gas produced from the carbide and a fine black soot was the result. We painted our sights with the soot and this gave them a totally non-reflective surface. This really worked, producing a sharply defined sight alignment. I guess the carbide lamp went the way of the dodo when optical sights were introduced.

But blackened sights did not. I was in Mark Fore and Strike, a Reno, Nev., gun emporium a few weeks ago and saw sight black in an aerosol can on the shelves. I'll be using it again for gun review shooting. It conjures up old days of pouring through the Gil Hebard catalog to see if he had re-stocked the little bottles of sight black that you painted on like fingernail polish.

Latest

001 Ba30th Cover 01
001 Ba30th Cover 01

30 Years Of Bond Arms Pistols

Bond Arms, the Texas-based maker of a series of double-barrel derringers inspired by a design from the Old West, celebrates 30 years in business in 2025.

Holiday Firearm Sales Off To Slow Start, Down From 2024 Numbers

NICS background checks conducted during the week of Black Friday, traditionally one of the busiest holiday shopping days of the year, show a slow start in terms of holiday gun sales.

Preview: BenShot Musket Ball Rocks Glass

America celebrates its 250th anniversary in 2026, and you can toast the country’s birthday with one of BenShot’s rocks glasses specially tailored to the occasion.

Rifleman Review: Walther Arms PDP Match Steel Frame

Walther Arms took its polymer-frame Performance Duty Pistol design and crafted it entirely from steel to create its PDP Match Steel Frame, which is a true heavyweight designed just for the pure joy of shooting.

150 Years Of The Boxlock Shotgun

Many hunters think of the iconic boxlock shotgun as an American field gun, but although the design was popularized on American hunting fields, it was initially developed 150 years ago for a renowned gunmaker in Great Britain.

Preview: Alpine Products Gun Slicker V2

Mother Nature can unexpectedly unleash her wrath on any outdoor range session or hunt, and this lightweight product from Alpine Innovations will protect your most valuable long guns without completely limiting their use.

Interests



Get the best of American Rifleman delivered to your inbox.