Originally posted by SmTx
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Originally posted by Ætheling View PostIf a scope is properly mounted with excellent quantity rings that are loctited the zero should never move unless the scope is permanently damaged. Ive had Leupolds that are dead on that were zeroed when I was a child.
I still verify before hunting. Good practice to have confidence in your weapon.
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Which rings do ya consider quality? I’ve got some tally and leupold but just got em on good reviews.
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Originally posted by Jeremy7306 View PostWhich rings do ya consider quality? I’ve got some tally and leupold but just got em on good reviews.
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Leupold and tally both make excellent rings. I’ve had tally’s on multiple dangerous game rifles without ever having an issue. They get banged around and taken on and off and have yet to lose zero after 15 years. I had my nightforce in a set of leupold mark 4 rings get thrown out of a Polaris a few years ago at 40 mph, we came across some nilgai before I was able to check zero, but it was fine and added some nilgai to the freezer from 300 yards.
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Scope Zero
Originally posted by Jeremy7306 View PostWhich rings do ya consider quality? I’ve got some tally and leupold but just got em on good reviews.
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I typically use ARC, Seekins, Nightforce or Hawkins. Are are well proven. Spuhr are high $$ but built like a tank.
I’ve read about enough Talley failures that I won’t use them anymore.
Leupold falls somewhere in the middle.
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rings are important, 100% agree, but assume you have a good set of rings and they’re properly torqued… what kind of force do you think would actually knock off a scope? if you’re walking through the woods and rack the scope on a tree, or if you lean it against a truck or a ground blind and it falls directly on the scope, would you expect it (and be confident) that it’s still holding zero?Last edited by BobbyJoe; 10-19-2022, 06:23 AM.
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Originally posted by BobbyJoe View Postrings are important, 100% agree, but assume you have a good set of rings and they’re properly torqued… what kind of force do you think would actually knock off a scope? if you’re walking through the woods and rack the scope on a tree, or if you lean it against a truck or a ground blind and it falls directly on the scope, would you expect it (and be confident) that it’s still holding zero?
Conversely my son was at a rifle match standing in line with butt of his rifle on his boot, lost his grip and the rifle tipped over, it landed on a rock directly on the elevation turret. Rifle shot 8" high and right @100 yards and required a complete rebuild by Leupold.
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Originally posted by Briar Friar View PostIve had scopes mounted and zeroed by local gun shop. The rings were torqued down on oneside and had gap on other side. Every shot was different until I noticed the gap differences. I retightened rings and it kept shifting poi. I swapped the front ring cap with the back ring cap, retightened and no more shifting zero problems.
Once I figure scope and ring set combo, I scratch hash marks into rings amd scopes. I give zero chits about my rig being scratched. It helps me visually ensure alignment is still on…at least externally.
Internally shifting is another ball of wax.
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Had zero issue with my scope (Vortex Viper) all season long. Shot a handful of deer/pigs right where I was aiming. Deer season ended and my family had book a weekend hunt/vaction at the YO Schriner ranch for Sika, Axis and Red Stag.
Went out to check zero and my rifle was shooting 5" left @100yrd. Tried adjusting the E/W turret and it brought it over only to 3". Kept adjusting the turret and would not bring the zero any closer than 3" to the left @100yrd. Now the rifle is locked into place, on a solid shooting plateform, scope rings properly tightened with 5 different shooters testing it out and all same results.
Long story short I ended up using my brother's 308 to kill a sika and sent my scope of Vortex after the hunt. Vortex couldnt find anything wrong with it either, so they sent it back after testing the zero and giving it a clean. Remounted it and it has never given me an issue since. Super weird, never droped it and transported the gun in a hard case from the safe to the time I checked zero at the ranch.
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Originally posted by HunterB View PostLeupold and tally both make excellent rings. I’ve had tally’s on multiple dangerous game rifles without ever having an issue. They get banged around and taken on and off and have yet to lose zero after 15 years. I had my nightforce in a set of leupold mark 4 rings get thrown out of a Polaris a few years ago at 40 mph, we came across some nilgai before I was able to check zero, but it was fine and added some nilgai to the freezer from 300 yards.
I do have Talley steel bases and rings on a Marlin 45/70 that were case colored to match the receiver and all. I hope they never give me an issue cuz that wasn’t cheap.
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Originally posted by BobbyJoe View Postrings are important, 100% agree, but assume you have a good set of rings and they’re properly torqued… what kind of force do you think would actually knock off a scope? if you’re walking through the woods and rack the scope on a tree, or if you lean it against a truck or a ground blind and it falls directly on the scope, would you expect it (and be confident) that it’s still holding zero?
Totally depends on the quality of the optic. I can beat the crap out of a NF, Leupold Mk5, Vortex Razor, etc and not hesitate to take a shot at 500+. Complete different story when you start talking a $150-200 budget scope.
The hardest fall I think I’ve had was with a Vortex Razor LHT mounted on an AR during a varmint hunt. It took a tumble off the side of the bed rail of a pickup onto a caliche road. Hit the ground hard enough to leave a decent dent in the scope objective. I didn’t trust it after that and had to test the zero before we kept hunting, but it was still dead on. I was pretty impressed. I kept using it like that for several months before I sent it back to Vortex.
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I’ve only ever used the two piece tally’s with their standard base for bolt guns. Mostly with the QD levers on a .375 H&H and .416 Rigby. Those have never let me or my father down after 30 years of using them, I’ll definitely be wary of the one piece mounts though.
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