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The Marlin Model 336 is a lever-action rifle and carbine made by Marlin Firearms. Since its introduction in 1948, it has been offered in a number of different calibers and barrel lengths, but is commonly chambered in .30-30 Winchester or .35 Remington , using a 20- or 24-inch barrel.
A common adjustment value in firearm sights is 1 cm at 100 meters which equals 10 mm / 100 m = 1 / 10 mrad. The true definition of a milliradian is based on a unit circle with a radius of one and an arc divided into 1,000 mrad per radian, hence 2,000 π or approximately 6,283.185 milliradians in one turn , and rifle scope ...
Precision machining used in manufacture of modern firearms and testing prior to distribution have improved the probability these sights will be correctly positioned; but various factors may cause bullet placement to be different from expected: Sights may have been loosened or moved from their intended positions since the last test firing. [4]
With tangent sights, the rear sight is often used to adjust the elevation, and the front the windage. The M16A2 later M16 series rifles have a dial adjustable range calibrated rear sight, and use an elevation adjustable front sight to "zero" the rifle at a given range. The rear sight is used for windage adjustment and to change the zero range.
The Advanced Combat Optical Gunsight (ACOG) is a series of prismatic telescopic sights manufactured by Trijicon. The ACOG was originally designed to be used on the M16 rifle and M4 carbine, but Trijicon has also developed ACOG accessories for other firearms. Models provide fixed-power magnification levels from 1.25× to 6×. [1]
1PN51-2 reflector-based night sight for the RPG-29. [87] 1PN58 refractor-based night sight for a range of small arms and grenade launchers. [88] 1PN93-2 reflector-based night sight for the RPG-7D3, see photo. 1PN110, a more recent (~Gen 3) night sight for the RPG-29. [89] 1PN113, a night sight similar to the 1PN110, for the SV-98 sniper rifle. [89]
30-30 marlin, started on 4 November 2008 by novice user Earlsj, appears to be attempting to duplicate the content of this article — and faring badly in the attempt. I propose that any useful prose in said article be merged into this article and then to delete "30-30 marlin". —Quicksilver T @ 17:37, 15 December 2008 (UTC)
The .35 Remington (9.1 x 49 mm) is the only cartridge from Remington's lineup of medium-power rimless cartridges still in commercial production. Introduced in 1906, it was originally chambered for the Remington Model 8 semi-automatic rifle in 1908.