150” wide notch, with carry friendly rounded corners and a single small diminished yellow tritium dot placed below the notch. 125” wide, with a prominent white outlined green tritium dot filling the top half of the front post. The front sight attaches as normal with a 3/16” hex screw, and I was able to easily drift in the rear sight and secure it in place with the single stainless set screw. I ordered a Warren Tactical Sevigny Carry Tritium 2 dot sight set from SKD Tactical and had them in hand a few days later. Noting that the sight dimensions were the same as the Defoor night sights, and seeing a tritium option available, I decided to give them a try. Warren Tactical Sights – Sevigny Carry Tritium 2 Dotįor years on various gun forums, I’d heard about Warren Tactical Sevigny Competition and Carry sights. The past few months, I’ve been trying out two distinctly different sets of sights on my pistols… By now, I knew that I liked the dimensions of the Defoor sights, and I also wanted a prominent front sight to draw my eye. Those sights found a new home on one of Robert’s pistols, and I was back to square one. However, as I detailed in this AAR, the width of the front sight caused me some problems at 25 yards and beyond. I think it is an effective night sight solution for someone with good eyesight, but I personally have great difficulty in varied lighting conditions with what are still essentially plain black sights. The concept works and works well, but the low position of the dot is something that I’ve had difficulty adapting to after 20 years of looking at traditional front night sights.
Once the option became available, I upgraded to the tritium front night sight for the Defoor sight set. The short version is that I really liked them, but I wanted a night sight option as well as a more prominent focal point to draw my eye to the front sight. Robert tried them out as well on one of his pistols and sent them back to me, so take that for what it’s worth. Ultimately, I discovered that I wasn’t a fan of the “U” notch rear and I felt that the sights were too tall. You can read about my experience with them here. I started out by trying the Vickers Elite Battlesights offered by Wilson Combat.
When I first switched from my Gen3 G19 to my Gen4 G19, I made new sights an immediate priority. I encourage you to draw your own conclusions based on your own experiences! I’m just telling you what has worked for me so far. I said I didn’t want to to necessarily review the sights because individual eyesight, individual brain function, and individual preferences will invariably lead to different conclusions for different shooters. I hesitate to use the term “review” when discussing sights anymore, especially after reading this. At any rate, this post is a collection of my experiences with various sight options for the Glock pistol. I’ve tried several options at considerable expense and what follows are some observations. In short, I’ve been disappointed with my accuracy despite frequent practice and I’ve also been compelled to adapt to progressive lenses in my eyeglasses due to presbyopia. Right now I'm partial to the Warrens because my recently sold USPc had green front/orange rear sights, and the Warrens are also less expensive.My recent experiences in multiple pistol classes and my aging eyesight have resulted in somewhat of a personal odyssey in finding sights that I like and that also work well for me. Bearing that in mind, if I had to choose only one of the two, which would you guys recommend? My theme is "simplicity", and that extends even to the ergonomics of the guns simplest, fastest possible sight picture, smooth-faced trigger for a simplified feel, etc. I was thinking I'd put the Warrens on the 26 and sometime in the future maybe put the Heinie Ledges on the 19 for class/training use, but so far I've done my best to keep both guns set up the same way.
Warren glock night sights plus#
The Ledges are due in June, the Warrens are available now and their suggested installer is an hour's drive from here, plus they're less expensive, as far as I can tell.Īre there any differences in quality/durability/suitability for concealement between the two? I like the two-dot vertical alignment setup, and I'm torn between the Warren Tactical "Sevigny Carry" and the upcoming Heinie Straight 8 "Ledge" sights. I have a G26 for carry and a G19 for "everything else" but at the moment I can only afford to put night sights on the carry piece.