yamoon wrote on Jun 21
st, 2020 at 8:09pm:
I have a Mëister also...
The pin holds the block to the rear of the mortise as the block raises it would cam any stubborn cartridge in. This is just an opinion.
Mike
I also have a Buchel Meister and that would be my assessment of the pin's purpose as well.
By the way, while most American single shot target rifles have only front and tang sights -- take special note of JägerWilhelm's pictures up above which show a mid-barrel sight AND a tang sight
both mounted on the rifle at the same time.
I had asked about "that odd setup" recently on the German Gun Collectors Forum and the answers I got surprised me:
* I was told the Germans would first sight-in their rifles using the mid-barrel and front sights -- and then the rear tang sight was sighted to co-align with the mid-barrel sight -- and
it's only purpose was to "sharpen the image" of the mid-barrel sight.
* Posters told me that German matches could allow all 3 sights; or some would allow only 2 sights, but typically those were "No tang sight" (and mid-barrel and front sights only) which I found pretty amazing.
I have a Buchel Meister and a Haenel KK Sport (.22) and they both have the tang sights -- but no mid-barrel sights.
The way I was raised, shooting High & Low Walls, or Sharps with my late Dad, I'd much rather have the tang sights than the mid-barrel sights any day -- and I don't think my German rifles are less accurate that way, as it's what I'm used to and expect to see.
Hope this is helpful or interesting.
Old No7