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Mr. Eisenberg.
How did he do with the iron sight on the third target?
Mr. Simmons.
On the third target he missed the boards completely. And we have not checked this out. It appears that for the
firing posture which Mr. Miller--Specialist Miller uses, the iron sight is not zeroed for him, since his impacts
on the first and second targets were quite high, and against the third target we would assume that the projectile
went over the top of the target, which extended only a few inches over the top of the silhouette.
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. . .
Yes, but Specialist Miller had very little experience firing Carcano rifles, probably a lot less than Oswald had. And he had never used the iron sights on a Carcano before. He probably did not know that the Carcano would miss high by 3.2, 4.7 and 5.5 inches at 43, 63 and 88 yards.
Most rifles fire a bullet at around 2000 MPH, but the Carcano fired at 1400 MPH. This means the rifle has to be aimed at a higher angle to hit a target at 200 meters, then it would with a different rifle. I don’t think that Specialist Miller would have been aware of this.
As I recall, now that Specialist Miller was made aware of how high the Carcano shot at a target at 88 yards, he wanted another try but they did not allow him to try again. They wanted to limit the use of Oswald’s rifle to keep it in the same condition as the time of the assassination, as much as possible.
Even so, if the target Specialist Miller was aiming at had been moving at the same distance, angle and speed as the limousine at z312, the target would have risen 3.7 inches by the time the bullet arrived. Resulting not in a miss of 5.5 inches high, as at a stationary target, but of a miss of 5.5 – 3.7 or 1.8 inches, and he would have hit the target.