Looked in CW9 handbook for rear sight adjustment instructions but only found side to side adjustment. Need to lower the rear sight. Any CW9 owners here that can help with rear sight adjustment instructions?

Moderator: carlson1
Being a CW-series Kahr, I'm assuming these are fixed sights? If so, there's not really an "adjustment" to be made for elevation. You would most likely need to inquire with kahr (or an aftermarket sight manufacturer) about a different height front sight. But before you do that ...Soldiernurse wrote:Shot all three of my handguns (Kahr CW9, Walther PPS & Glock 26 Gen 4) yesterday at Reds Indoor 100yd Range. Very pleased with my shooting results with PPS & G26. However, with aim at center mass the CW9 shot low on target.
Looked in CW9 handbook for rear sight adjustment instructions but only found side to side adjustment. Need to lower the rear sight. Any CW9 owners here that can help with rear sight adjustment instructions?
No sir, I used the same aim points used for all three; CW9, G26, as well as my PPS. The CW9 was the only one (yesterday) to shoot low on target. In fact, w/CW9 I compensated by aiming well above the black in order to hit center black. Yet, G26 & PPS aiming point equaled same hit spot on target.A-R wrote:...But I have a PPS and G26 myself (and have shot multiple Kahrs) and would think if any of these has the "European" sights - which would cause you to impact low if you're using a 6 o'clock hold on your other guns, it would be the Walther and not the Glock or Kahr.Soldiernurse wrote:Shot all three of my handguns (Kahr CW9, Walther PPS & Glock 26 Gen 4) yesterday at Reds Indoor 100yd Range. Very pleased with my shooting results with PPS & G26. However, with aim at center mass the CW9 shot low on target.
Looked in CW9 handbook for rear sight adjustment instructions but only found side to side adjustment. Need to lower the rear sight. Any CW9 owners here that can help with rear sight adjustment instructions?
Anyway, hope this helps.
interesting ....Soldiernurse wrote:No sir, I used the same aim points used for all three; CW9, G26, as well as my PPS. The CW9 was the only one (yesterday) to shoot low on target. In fact, w/CW9 I compensated by aiming well above the black in order to hit center black. Yet, G26 & PPS aiming point equaled same hit spot on target.
This is very good advice. Whenever I get a new gun (or even just new sights) I always fire it from as much of a solid rest as I can to take the human factor (my subtle hitches) out of the equation. With small carry guns you won't be able to use items like Ransom rests (http://www.ransomrest.com/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;) easily to truly lock down the gun, but a solid two-hand grip with muzzle end resting on a block or sandbag does well enough for combat accuracy/consistency on 10-15 yard shots so you can get an idea if the sight is "about right" or "way off"mr surveyor wrote:It took me a few rounds to adjust to the long trigger of the CW9 a couple of years ago, but having had KelTec pistols for several years the transition was pretty smooth. Most folks tend to shoot low, or low left due to anticipation of the break...the break that seems like will never happen. The Kahr trigger, with cam action, is the smoothest long DA trigger on the market... you will adjust. Now as for the sights, I would recommend not touching them until you've proven they are off (which I wouldn't expect). Sit at the bench with sandbag rests and try a target... or easier still, try the wall drill and concentrate on the front sight on a small target 6-8" away with dry fire practice. You will definately see the muzzle movement.
I would be very surprised to hear of a CW9 out of the box where POA varied noticeably from POI.
I know Dawson Precision offers aftermarket front sights (serrated plain, tritium, and fiber optic) for Kahr C series guns, but just checked and all are listed with same 0.180" height.The Annoyed Man wrote:Unfortunately, the CW9 front sight is not dovetailed into the frame. It is pinned and "melted" into the frame, and I don't know if different height front sights are available for it.
Well, both (my shooting) PPS & G26 were not low & to the left. Plus, my brother, 17 yrs my senior, was with me to help sight-in my TC .308 Venture Predator rifle. He is an excellent shot and had same issue with my CW9 & had trouble with POA/POI using my CW9 but not G26 or PPS.mr surveyor wrote:It took me a few rounds to adjust to the long trigger of the CW9 a couple of years ago, but having had KelTec pistols for several years the transition was pretty smooth. Most folks tend to shoot low, or low left due to anticipation of the break...the break that seems like will never happen. The Kahr trigger, with cam action, is the smoothest long DA trigger on the market... you will adjust. Now as for the sights, I would recommend not touching them until you've proven they are off (which I wouldn't expect). Sit at the bench with sandbag rests and try a target... or easier still, try the wall drill and concentrate on the front sight on a small target 6-8" away with dry fire practice. You will definately see the muzzle movement.
I would be very surprised to hear of a CW9 out of the box where POA varied noticeably from POI.
Just the fact you're shooting the other two guns better in itself doesn't mean much - the slight difference in trigger pull weight/feel/distance can be enough to throw off shots. But if another shooter is having same problem with same gun and also not having same problem with same other two guns, that really leads me to believe you have a problem that may need to be addressed by manufacturer. If it doesn't self correct in the next 100 rounds, I'd call up Kahr and ask them to fix it. Be sure to tell them that multiple different shooters get the same problem, POI same direction and distance from POA, and also confirm to them that you've tried this from a rested position with same results (to as best you can eliminate shooter error).Soldiernurse wrote:Well, both (my shooting) PPS & G26 were not low & to the left. Plus, my brother, 17 yrs my senior, was with me to help sight-in my TC .308 Venture Predator rifle. He is an excellent shot and had same issue with my CW9 & had trouble with POA/POI using my CW9 but not G26 or PPS.
I need to send about 100 more rounds down range w/CW9 to meet the 200 rd break-in.