Nah man, really, keep your day job! You weren't that good, that's why the "club" you danced at closed!If my balls start glowing, I'm going back to stripping
Hey! Hey! Hey! Keep your thumbs to yourself!This thread has a big thumbs up from me.
I'm wondering if the night sights may be a different height or dimensions than standard Glock sights, if so it may be just enough to be pressing on a nerve in your leg.
Tritium is a Beta Emitter and cannot harm you from outside the body. Clothing and a holster will block the radiation from a beta emitter and not affect you. In fact your dead skin cells will protect you from tritium. Do not break open the glass night sight vials and eat the contents. Further info from the Savannah River Nuclear site and Health Physics Society.
http://www.srs.gov/general/news/factsheets/het.pdf
Tritium is a radioactive form of hydrogen. An atom of normal hydrogen has one negative particle, called an electron, and one positive particle, called a proton. An atom of tritium also contains two neutral particles, called neutrons. These extra particles make the tritium atom unstable and cause it to emit a very low-energy form of beta radiation.Like normal hydrogen, tritium can bond with oxygen to form water. When this happens,the resulting water (called tritium oxide or tritiated water) is also radioactive. Because tritium oxide is chemically identical to normal water, it cannot be filtered out of the water.
Any possible health effects from tritium are the result of the beta radiation it emits.Because tritium’s radiation cannot penetrate the skin, the only real exposure a personreceives is the radiation received while tritium is inside the body.Exposure time — and thus the possibility of health effects — depends on the form of tritium present, elemental tritium gas or tritium oxide. While people can inhale tritium gas, only about 0.004 percent is retained more than a minute or so, so it is an insignificant exposure hazard.Tritium oxide can enter the body in various ways. It can be inhaled as water vapor,absorbed by the skin or consumed. Regardless of the way it enters the body, tritium oxide immediately mixes with the body fluids and is eliminated like normal water. The rate of elimination,naturally, varies from person to person. In general, however, half of the tritiated water is eliminated in 10 days.This can be sped up by drinking larger quantities of liquids.
http://hps.org/documents/tritium_fact_sheet.pdf
The half-life of tritium is 12.3 years. The beta particle that is emitted by tritium is considered to be very weak, having an average kinetic energy of 6 keV. As a result, these particular beta particles can only travel about 6 mm in air before they lose their ability to cause ionizations. In tissue, tritium’s beta particle is so weak that it cannot penetrate the typical thickness of the dead layer of skin that exists on the outside of the human body. For this reason, the beta particle emitted by tritium is generally only considered to be hazardous if a significant quantity of tritium is, or has the potential to be, taken into the body.
This is a picture of what Beta burns look like. This is the "Radioactive Boy Scout". More info about him here... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Hahn
and here The Radioactive Boy Scout | Harper's Magazine
it is possible you have something else causing the problem... the type of radiation the night sights give off is safe... you could take your sight to someone with a geiger counter and see if it is super high..