This is just one guy's opinion. If your eyepiece is properly adjusted, it is focused exactly in the plane of the reticle, and if you then adjust the image of the target so that it falls into the same plane, you will, as it were, have your cake and eat it too. (have no parallax, and the sharpest possible image). Again, just my opinion, it is extremely easy, more common than not, to have the eyepiece very slightly out of adjustment, and when that is the case, you the reticle and the sharpest target image in two different focal planes, which causes one to have to choose as to which is more important, and go with that. For my own scopes, I have worked back and forth between front and back adjustments, making small changes to the point where peak target sharpness and absolute zero parallax occur at the same point of objective focus. I will admit that the objective adjustment may vary slightly from day to day, but when I have made that slight change, to sharpen the image, I still had no parallax. Often I have come across posters who adamantly insist that one should do a single "proper" adjustment of the eyepiece. lock it down and never again touch it. If one is talking about lower power scopes of the hunting variety this may be OK, but for my 36X BR scopes it just does not cut it. I have to do a little fine tuning to get to my goal. Again, I make no claim of expertise, and am just reporting my experience.