The whole focus the eyepiece, lock it down and never touch it thing is in error for the following reason. Even if the shooter follows the correct procedure, the eyepiece may be focused ever so slightly out of the plane of the reticle. I have helped numerous shooters at the range with a specific problem that this approach does not address or solve, that is when the target is at its sharpest, there is still some small amount of parallax, perhaps as little as the width of the cross hair, or only slightly more. The other way of saying this is that when parallax has been adjusted so that it is completely gone the target is not at peak sharpness. Personally, I do not care to argue about scope theory, because I have a technique that I can use to solve the problem. It involves making very small adjustments of the eyepiece while at the range and with a target down range. A small move is made at the eyepiece, the target image refocused to peak sharpness, and the setup tested for parallax. If it is worse, the adjustment was made in the wrong direction, and after putting things back as they were, a very small move should be made in the other direction, the target image refocused, and parallax checked. Eventually you should arrive at an eyepiece adjustment that has the target at its sharpest and no parallax. For those that insist that eyepieces have nothing to do with parallax, if your scope is in perfect adjustment so that there is absolutely no parallax, and your target image is as sharp as your scope's' optics are capable of, move your eyepiece adjustment just a little, but not so much that the cross hairs are not sharp and black, and the test for parallax. The change that you made will refocus the eyepiece slightly out of the plane of the reticle, and there will be a small amount of parallax. All of this presupposes a second focal plane reticle. I have no experience with FFP scopes. Summing up, someone can be 99% right and only 1% wrong, but when the 1% is about the problem under discussion, it can lead people seriously astray. The funny thing is that these days people seem to be overly concerned with following advice that comes to them via the internet, from people that they do not know, and they seem to be afraid to use their own intellect and do some experimenting, even when no harm could result. I realize that my advice is just more from someone that you do not know, on the internet, and the only qualification that I have is that others have followed the directions that I have provided and solved their problem. Don't take my word for this, try it. If you do it correctly, I think that your results will speak for themselves. Good luck and good shooting.
Boyd Allen (not a screen name)