You can also pull the bolt out and look own the barrel to make sure you are not the scope is not way off!
They areshouldn't we make sure the rings and mounts are on correctly and torqued to the correct spec's before we get all nuts with the cross hairs????
or have you already done that part
My scope isn't one of those kind of scopes, all you gotta do is put it up to the rail, twist the knobs and it attaches to the railsA lot of people get the rings wrong
start at the rifle and move up to the scope checking all the connections are solid and flat and even
Did you check level of the rifle
than check the level the rail
then check level the rings
then check level of the scope?
My scope isn't one of those kind of scopes, all you gotta do is put it up to the rail, twist the knobs and it attaches to the rails
Neverdoes it have iron sights on it sounds like that's the good option
This is the critical first step. Sandbag the rifle so it won't shift as you switch between sighting thru the barrel and the scope, at a target no more than 25 yards away. keep in mind that the scope height will need to be taken into account at that range, and the target style below may help. It assumes you have a 1" scope height Once you get the crosshairs on the green (with the bore sight on the red) then shoot a group to confirm. When you KNOW you are good at 25, then you can work to 100, and likely be on paper.You can also pull the bolt out and look own the barrel to make sure you are not the scope is not way off!
HUH?Never
HUH?
A real rifleman can use any system
Iron or glass!
I have seen people with iron sights out shoot tons of people who use scopes
My eyes ain't no good at distances less than arms length. Front and rear sights are a little fuzzy.depends on how good your eyes are. I wear glasses, no line bifocals ~~~ it sux. thats why I use a scope
depends on how good your eyes are. I wear glasses, no line bifocals ~~~ it sux. thats why I use a scope
Ha ha I know exactly what you're saying I have old eyes and glasses
sounds like you need a carbine with Peepsights. That rear aperture gives you better depth of field and you can see the front sight
It is too bad manufacturers bundle scopes, because people end up having issues.
The last time I put a cheap scope on a gun I dislodged the wire reticle before even taking the first shot. It's not that all cheapie combo scopes are crap, but more of them are than more expensive ones. You'll be more likely to have it lose its seal over time (doesn't matter if you learn this at the range, but it does if you raise it on game and everything is clouded), clarity won't be as good, low-light won't be as good, it will be less likely to hold zero. I have a $50 simmons scope on a 22 I am satisfied with for that use, but I can barely feel its clicks (I sure as hell can't hear them). The last combo scope I got was decently rated, but it also required a coin to adjust. That's a hassel; my recent one is finger adjustable, nice clicks, and has a zero-reset turret, plus a lifetime warranty and excellent clarity.Bullshit. I can land my hits in a 6 inch circle at 150 yards with my freebie combo scope with little effort. I am not an anomaly or an exceptional shooter. When you want to start shooting less than 2 MOA at range you need to spend some money on glass.
^^^^ ThisLet's see picks of your setup.
I'm tired of IronHUH?
A real rifleman can use any system
Iron or glass!
I have seen people with iron sights out shoot tons of people who use scopes