My great grandfather left me a Winchester Model 1894 chambered in 30-30 that was manufactured in 1949. I didn't know him very well--he died when I was 5 or 6. I didn't even know he had left anything to me until a few years ago (approx. 20 years since his death). I've since had the rifle out with its open sights (semi-buckhorn) and managed to get some decent groups at 100 yards, but it was tough. I haven't done a lot of rifle shooting, so more practice would surely do me good, but I'm looking at other sight options.
I'm considering replacing the rear sight with a receiver peep sight, probably a current-production Williams, but I might search for an older steel Lyman or a Redfield, if I can find one reasonably priced. My only problem is that my rifle has no factory holes drilled or tapped in the side of the receiver. It also has no hole drilled or tapped in the tang for a tang sight. I did some research on this a while ago and Winchester, for whatever reason, stopped drilling and tapping the receiver and/or tang at the factory around WWII and started up again in the early 50's.
Am I nuts for considering putting holes in a pre-64 Winchester? I know it will diminish the collector's value, but I have no intention of ever selling it because of sentimental reasons. The gun is by no means a safe queen--it has been used, but well taken care of. Besides, I'm sure great-grandpa would want me to use it--not just have it sit in a safe. I'm taking it deer hunting this fall with its current open sights, but I think a good receiver sight would perhaps make it more user-friendly.