I'd pull the scope base when you remove the scope and double check everything. None of the screws protrude into the bolt raceway, the base seats to the top of the action, etc.
Also might be worth loosening the ring caps on the scope and just snuging them down again. Some scopes go haywire when the caps are even mildly over-tightened. If you are using a torque wrench, I'd back off 5 or 10 inch-pounds from your current setting. Same on the base. The old German goodentight often will warp aluminum bases and suddenly your rings are misaligned and it cascades down the line like dominos.
EDIT: sorry, I was slow and missed your post. Still suggest retorquing everything a little lower.
Also might be worth loosening the ring caps on the scope and just snuging them down again. Some scopes go haywire when the caps are even mildly over-tightened. If you are using a torque wrench, I'd back off 5 or 10 inch-pounds from your current setting. Same on the base. The old German goodentight often will warp aluminum bases and suddenly your rings are misaligned and it cascades down the line like dominos.
EDIT: sorry, I was slow and missed your post. Still suggest retorquing everything a little lower.










