I will show u on saturday or sunday.Let's see picks of your setup.
I will show u on saturday or sunday.Let's see picks of your setup.
I will show u on saturday or sunday.
yes, I've been shooting over half my life. this is my first scoped weapon@Dayten have you done much shooting before you got this 06?
Never heard, I just checked it out and it's all sold outJust want to be sure it's not your mechanics that could be part of the problem. Have you ever heard of Project Appleseed? It's a great program for shooters of all levels along with some Revolutionary War History ( Lexington and Concord )
yeh, I looked at the Saratoga one. But in Jan it is all sold out it saysSomething for you to watch for in the spring! You may have to travel some to attend one, We run two a year at my Club in Saratoga County April and September.
I did, I figured a way out and I am testing it on saturday@Dayten as mentioned before, you need to start close. You can't zero a gun at far distances if you don't even know where the bullet is hitting. Get a huge target and set it up at 25 yards.
Fire 3 shots. If your shots are low and left, turn the dials on the scope in both elevation and windage and fire again. The scope should have arrows on each dial. One will say up and the other may say left. If you need to go up, turn the dial in the direction of the arrow that says up. If you need to go right, turn the other dial in the direction of the arrow that says right. Fire again. Now the bullet moved. Great. It's still not at bulls eye. Adjust accordingly and fire again. Each time you should be getting closer.
Once you are on the bullseye at 25 yards, repeat the process now at 50 yards and then 100 yards.
As far as holding the gun, you don't want to rest the barrel on anything. Keep both elbows on the table and one hand on the handguard. Find your target. Exhale your breath (let out all you air in your lungs) and slowly squeeze the trigger. Do not jerk it. Each shot should be a total surprise that it went off.
If you just put the cross hairs on the target and just slap or jerk the trigger, your shots will go everywhere and you won't get a group.
Hope this helps.
Easiest way to zero a scope...... get close enough (50 yds) and shoot at a target on a large piece of plywood. Hold steady and aim for the target. After you shoot, dial your scope to the impact (holding steady or on a lead sled). Move back to 100 yards and repeat. Did this with my creedmoor on Sunday. Hit steel at 500 yards on my 4th shot
FYI... Cheap scopes sometimes don't zero or won't hold zero!!
OK YOU JUST ANSERED MY QUESTOIN.Hm. Weird. I put my gun in the safe. Then I take it out a few days ago and the scope is turned some how. It's wicked tight.
Do you have some time this week? You can come up to my Club and we can get you squared away.
If you can't get up here, place a target (24"x36 inch piece of poster board with a target dot in the center) out at 25 yards and see where it is hitting. At 25 yards you are going to have to adjust your scope 16 ( or 32 for 1/8) clicks for every inch you need to move it. You will want to adjust so you are hitting 1 1/2 to 2 inches below your point of aim at 25 yards. Wait about 2 minutes between shots as to let the barrel cool, or you can feel the barrel if it feels warm or hot let it cool down before taking another shot. Then move out to the 100 yard line and adjust your point of impact to your point of aim.
You may have issues chasing your point of impact of you are shooting too fast for the barrel to cool. If you have taken more than 3 shots too close together in time you are most likely wasting ammo while frustrating yourself.
I'd remove the scope from the rings and then the rings from the rail re-install the rail using red lock tite and torque down then install the ring to the proper torque.
Sorry.I have never used locktite on my rings (aeroprecision mount. And an ADM mount). I have had my 3 gun rifle scope mounted for nearly 4 years. I have never had a ring problem. I have never had to change my zero.
IF you feel the need for locktite go with blue. If you use red you may never get the Rings off the scope ever again.
think of cross hairs as rear sight--when sightin in rifle if bullet hits 2 inches to right -- move scope 2 inches right--yes cross hairs move left-- just like rear sight would do to move point of aim to the right where ur 1st shot hit-- now it would be opposite if ur allowing for wind drift -- hope this helps
Wrong, if you are shooting right, rotate the scope knob in the direction of the left arrow which moves the hair to the right, which in turn, moves the point of impact to the left.
Wrong, if you are shooting right, rotate the scope knob in the direction of the left arrow which moves the hair to the right, which in turn, moves the point of impact to the left.