CaptJim
Silver $$ Contributor
Wondering if anyone has had this happen:
For years I have used two methods of bore sighting. My favorite is to look through the bore at a target and align crosshairs accordingly.
The second is to use my old Bushnell optical bore sighter, which has done a good job.
Which one I choose depends on circumstances.
I just recently changed a scope from one rifle to another and since it was at night I used the Bushnell boresighter. The scope is a Bushnell LRTS 4,5-18 which is good quality and has tracked reliably. It is mounted on a Rem 700 SA with an EGW one-piece base and Warne vertical rings. ETA: Not Warne, but EGW matched rings. Memory fart!
I decided to center the horizontal adjustment by dialing all the way to stop and counting the total clicks to get back to the other side. I wanted to see if optical center and bore lined up closely. The total in this case was 256 clicks, so I moved the windage 128 clicks in the opposite direction to center the windage crosshair.
Looking through the scope at the boresighter's grid, the windage was off by 4 lines (each line represents aprox 4" @ 100yds, or 16" total. The scope is in Mils so it took 39 clicks to get back to center (.10mil/click).
Either the boresighter is off by that much; or the scope's windage travel is not the same on both sides of center; or the scope rail may be misaligned. I removed and replaced the scope on the rail and got the same results.
I've never had to make this much of a windage adjustment before with either bore sighting method.
I will shoot the rifle soon, zeroing at 100 and then take it out to 2 and 300 to see if the windage is that far off. My dilemma is if something is off, what would be the most likely cause? Just wondering if anyone has had this problem and can comment?
Thanks,
CJ
For years I have used two methods of bore sighting. My favorite is to look through the bore at a target and align crosshairs accordingly.
The second is to use my old Bushnell optical bore sighter, which has done a good job.
Which one I choose depends on circumstances.
I just recently changed a scope from one rifle to another and since it was at night I used the Bushnell boresighter. The scope is a Bushnell LRTS 4,5-18 which is good quality and has tracked reliably. It is mounted on a Rem 700 SA with an EGW one-piece base and Warne vertical rings. ETA: Not Warne, but EGW matched rings. Memory fart!
I decided to center the horizontal adjustment by dialing all the way to stop and counting the total clicks to get back to the other side. I wanted to see if optical center and bore lined up closely. The total in this case was 256 clicks, so I moved the windage 128 clicks in the opposite direction to center the windage crosshair.
Looking through the scope at the boresighter's grid, the windage was off by 4 lines (each line represents aprox 4" @ 100yds, or 16" total. The scope is in Mils so it took 39 clicks to get back to center (.10mil/click).
Either the boresighter is off by that much; or the scope's windage travel is not the same on both sides of center; or the scope rail may be misaligned. I removed and replaced the scope on the rail and got the same results.
I've never had to make this much of a windage adjustment before with either bore sighting method.
I will shoot the rifle soon, zeroing at 100 and then take it out to 2 and 300 to see if the windage is that far off. My dilemma is if something is off, what would be the most likely cause? Just wondering if anyone has had this problem and can comment?
Thanks,
CJ
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