paulleve
NES Member
I picked up an Arisaka Type 99 through on online auction recently, and took it to the range for the first time today. It's a Nagoya Last Ditch rifle made toward the end of 1944. The rounds I shot were hand loads made using Hornady 174 gr FMJs over a relatively light charge of IMR4895 in PPU cases. (This is one of those calibers that you can save a lot by reloading!)
The Last Ditch rifles have very simple sights on them. The front sight is a pointed post that can be drifted side to side allowing for windage adjustments, while the rear is a fixed aperture with no means to adjust elevation. I took the rifle to the long range, and at 200 yards it was hitting about 12" high. Once I figured out where to hold, it wasn't too hard to get hits on a C-zone silhouette at that distance. I got one hit at 300 using the same sight picture, but that was followed by some misses. Without a spotter to help figure out point of impact I decided to not waste ammunition beyond 200.
The Last Ditch rifles have very simple sights on them. The front sight is a pointed post that can be drifted side to side allowing for windage adjustments, while the rear is a fixed aperture with no means to adjust elevation. I took the rifle to the long range, and at 200 yards it was hitting about 12" high. Once I figured out where to hold, it wasn't too hard to get hits on a C-zone silhouette at that distance. I got one hit at 300 using the same sight picture, but that was followed by some misses. Without a spotter to help figure out point of impact I decided to not waste ammunition beyond 200.


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