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are you using a brass drift?
From yogidozer:Know I should but no. Put some cloth between the punch and the sight. Have not scratched anything. Probably should get a brass one before continuing. GliderJohn
The heat may also warm up dried caked cosmolone.
What is "applying a little heat"? I have a propane bottle torch attachment.
Step away from the gun, lay down the propane torch, and nobody gets hurt.. Maybe a heat gun?
Ok, here is my serious advice. I personally would not jack with the gun. It is a new gun to you. Your error of 2 inches at 50 feet could be due to the way you are holding the gun. Or the angle of the sun on the open iron sights. Or your trigger technique. Or the ammo. The next time you shoot it, it might not be off by 2 inches to the left.Personally, I would not attempt to adjust sights on a fixed sight gun unless I have shot it many many times, under varied conditions, and I have convinced myself there is a definite error that needs fixing. I have seen many people with adjustable sight guns adjusting the sights 8 clicks right one day, only to go 8 clicks left the next day. No big deal with adjustable sights, but a lot of needless hammering on a fixed sight gun.
John:Here is your challenge. Assume you are absolutely correct that you have a 2 inch error to the left at 50 feet (which I think is doubtful, but assume it is true). I have done the math for you. To fix that error, you need to move the rear sight 0.17 inches to the right. Good luck doing that with a hammer, as opposed to a sight pusher. Feel free to double check this. I measured sight radius on my Bulgarian Mak at 5.125 inches. 50 feet is 600 inches. 600/5.125 is 117.07. Two inches divided by 0.17 means the sight adjustment required is 0.17 inches.
I have actually owned the Mak for a few years and have put 500+ rounds through it with various brands of ammo. Have tried various holds and finger positioning and it stays impacting a bit left. I also shoot left handed. Really is not a big deal, just don't like having to hold the sights off to impact where I wish. Started out having a similar problem with a S&W Mod. 64 but found a hand position that pretty well eliminated it. My Mod. 36 snubby shoots dead center for me and so does my Uberti SSA replica. GliderJohn