At close range it won't matter. You don't look at the dot, you look at the target and put the dot on it. As long as you see red on the target where you intend to shoot, you're fine.
Asking legitimately, not making a joke: how's the trigger, especially the weight? Mine and several others at the range were way, way too heavy out of the box (worse than a revolver).
Is it still that way or has Springfield cleaned that up some?
Then you bought the wrong version: https://www.safegunlock.com/gun-lock-sizing
This really isn’t that difficult. They answer these questions on their website.
New, fine. Reman? Lots of reports of problems on the internet.
Ammoseek.com is your friend - don't forget to filter the search to shipper ratings of 6 or higher to avoid "low price, high shipping" scam sellers.
So much misinformation here.
Series 70 guns weren't "guaranteed to fire when dropped." They would fire when dropped on the muzzle, propelling the steel firing pin forward.
My Springfield series 70's don't have anything different than any other series 70. Why would you assume Springfields are...
I see this a lot - if you intentionally used it in a justified shoot, how would how the gun was modified to fire play into whether or not the intentionally self defense shooting was justified?