service rifle. The viewing aperture above the "3" (denoting the 300 m setting) can be seen. The diopter is in principle a vertically and horizontally (elevation and windage) adjustable occluder with a small hole (aperture), and is placed close in front of the shooter's aiming eye. Through this small hole the shooter can view the front sight component(s) and the intended target. The typical occluder used in target shooting diopters is a disc of about in diameter with a small hole in the middle. The small diopter viewing opening ensures the shooter's eye is very precisely and consistently centered behind the diopter sight. The diopter sight is easy to use and usually allows for very accurate aiming, because a relative long sighting line can be used. A long sighting line helps to reduce eventual angle errors and will, in case the sight has an incremental adjustment mechanism, adjust in smaller increments when compared to a further identical shorter sighting line.
Principle military sights have a day aperture of approximately , and the M16A2 also a night setting with a larger , and as such the military sight is not strictly a diopter sight in either setting. The "diopter sight effect" is achieved when looking through an aperture opening of approximately or less, and happens due to an optical phenomenon (edge effects) resulting in the light passing through being parallelized similar to how a
collimated lens would. Because of this optical effect the front sight will also appear more steady, even though the shooter moves the head in a way such that the sighting eye moves sideways relative to the rear sight. Also, the
depth of field is increased so that both the sights and
shooting target will appear sharp at the same time which further simplifies the aiming process. The
parallax distance of a diopter sight is effectively adjusted to be the same as the sight distance. For example, with a distance of between the front and rear sight, the sighting system is effectively parallax adjusted to a distance of in front of the rear sight. However, since the diopter hole is small, the aiming eye will be relatively well centered, and the parallax error will be relatively small in practice. There will be almost no parallax error if the eye and front globe sight are near perfectly centered through the diopter. In comparison, the parallax error on aperture sights with larger openings can increase quickly if the eye is not well centered in the rear sight. A parallax error of just at corresponds to an impact change of at . A rear sight with a larger aperture than is not strictly a diopter sight, but nonetheless is still often (incorrectly) referred to as such. With larger aperture sights the shooter must make a conscious effort to center the eye in the rear sight for precise aiming. A true diopter sight (aperture below 1.2 mm) however has the advantage that the shooter does not have to concentrate on eye and rear sight alignment for precision aiming, and therefore the sighting process is reduced to only aligning the front sight to the target. Aperture sights (both diopter and non-diopter) require being placed close to the aiming eye, while open sights have to be placed at least 30 cm away from the eye to in order to appear sharp.
Modern target sight setups Typical modern target shooting diopters offer windage and elevation correction in increments of at (which equals 0.02 to 0.04
mrad or ≈ 0.069 to 0.172
MOA). Some
ISSF (Olympic) shooting events require this precision level for sight adjustment since the score of the top competitors (last) shots series is expressed in tenths of scoring ring points. High-end target shooting diopters normally accept accessories like: • Rubber eye shields to restrain glare. • Anti-glare tubes. • Adjustable diopter aperture
iris diaphragms (typically offering between diameter apertures) to increase the
depth of field and reduce reflections. • Optical filter systems to increase the
contrast sensitivity for the aiming eye. • Semi-transparent occluders for the non-aiming eye to ensure optimal sighting conditions for match shooters. ==Complementing front sight element==