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Unfortunately I am finding myself now losing the ability to sight with my right eye. I have never learned to shoot "both eyes open".
![]() I would like any suggestions you folks may have for overcoming my vision problem and learning to use both eyes. Thanks for your help, Jack |
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If you are flat out losing vision in your eye, it may be worth learning to shoot left handed instead of leaning your head over to shoot with your left eye. I've never figured out how people shoot accurately doing that.
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http://www.youtube.com/user/joecatsean# |
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I'll be interested in this as well. A buddy shoots with both eyes open and shoots pretty well to. But I have never learned how to do that with any real accuracy at longer ranges. I used to front site shoot during CQB drills in the military, but were talking across the room type distances here, not hunting related.
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"With Gods help I shall endaevor to be one of his noblest works....A United States Coastguardsman". VADM Harry G Hamlet USCG Commandant 1932-1936 |
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No matter what the range, you still focus on the front sight with both eyes. It took me about ayear to get the hang of it and erase bad habits. In the beginning I had to squint the weak eye a lot.
With a scope with a lit retical you can shoot quickly at very short distances using two eyes as well....even with the front scope cover on (occluded). Lycanyourbrainwillmakeyoureyesfocusonceitunderstan dsthrope
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I taught Chuck Norris to bump-fire. |
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Quote:
It seems that age is catching up to me. I already have a bifocal prescription but now it seems the right eye is in the very early stage of degeneration. The eye doc referred me to a retinal specialist. He is not concerned, only cautious at this point. The left eye is unaffected but the right is my dominate one. I have gone to laser sights on my carry piece (CTC). That did make a huge difference, shots go where the dot goes . I would still very much like to learn to use both eyes across the open sights.I have learned a lesson here, single eye aiming is fine until you lose the use of that eye. Could happen very quickly, just imagine getting dust of dirt in your eye. Now how do you aim accurately? Thanks again for the tips. I will be out this weekend to give them a try. Jack |
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Don't know if this will help but. I'm 50 and over the past 2 years suffered the inevitable curse of presbyopia (the inability of the eye to focus close up). I've been using cheap store bought reading glasses over the past 2 years 1x, 1.25x, 1.50x. Recently I got a real prescription from the optometrist (bi-focals). I told him I was a shooter and asked him if he could adjust my prescription so I could see the front sight clearly. So he kinda split the difference for me to be able to see the front sight without distorting my distance vision to much. I also asked him to move the reading portion of the bi-focals pretty far down on the lens so I wouldn't see the line unless I looked for it. Boy it made a big difference in my ability to shoot both pistol and rifle (iron sights). The nicest thing about them is that the image is not distorted regardless of which part of the lens I'm looking through (like it did on the cheap store bought glasses). One more thing, with regards to aiming with a rifle, it's been debated among the pro's for years about the importance of keeping both eyes open.For combat applications and competitions where you need to quickly acquire a target, yes it's preferred. However, for stationary target shooting the data is inconclusive, some of the best shooters in the world close the non-aiming eye or "blind" it with a device. I personally keep both eyes open when shooting pistols or shotguns (trap) and wink my opposite eye to allow the aiming eye to acquire the front sight. When shooting rifle at fixed targets I always close my opposite eye.
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Clowns to the left of me, Jokers to the right... |
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Or you could focus on this cluster of letters and it may help in eye training.
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Quote:
I sure don’t want to give up the sport. Jack |
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. I would still very much like to learn to use both eyes across the open sights.
I sure don’t want to give up the sport. 



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