If you can't, you may have to file down the sight or do what I did and put laser grips on it. The Undercover is ideal for experienced shooters, such as police officers looking for a reliable and rugged backup piece, but you must be sure to test ammo to find something that shoots to point of aim. The revolver printed low at 15 yards with the loads I tried, but I used Crimson Trace laser grips on the Undercover for the accuracy test, and they were just the ticket. My question is I had a hard time pushing in the cylinder release, I tightened the screw down, the cylinder opens easy enough, BUT the release itself moves east to west and wiggles north to south. The gun is a handful with +P ammo, which is what you'd expect from a short-barreled, lightweight gun. Bought the 38 special Undercover Charter Arms because of the weight and the dealer said it was good for a protection gun in the house, especially for my wife. The Undercover (top, fitted with aftermarket Crimson Trace grips) is similar in size to the S&W Model 49. The rod is relatively thin, and slapping it sharply to punch out cases is uncomfortable. The best way to initiate a reload is to vigorously shake the revolver while depressing the rod with the support hand thumb. The Undercover displays this trait, and the hull nearest the frame consistently hangs up and takes work to eject. Revolvers with two-inch barrels have ejector rods with limited travel, and typically they don't eject spent cases efficiently extra effort is required to jettison them.
This setup makes for fast sight acquisition, and with its ergonomically designed memory grooved grips, the gun points naturally and is a good candidate for point shooting.
The non contrasting fixed sights are machined from its frame and barrel and consist of a broad.