Posted: 3/15/2016 6:01:25 PM EDT
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Well, my trusty little .17 got some new glass today (nothing special just a nikon 4x12 rimfire, it was on sale for 99$ this weekend had to grab it).. Anyway the rifle had a really cheap scope on it already so I decided to try something new... I put the gun in a vise in my garage, looked out the back door and zeroed in on a tree.. It had very interesting knot in the bark, so I held center of that.... Locked the gun in the vise, took the old scope of, installed my new scope, once the scope was torqued down, I got behind it, and adjusted the windage and elevation until I was dead center of that knot again... I estimated the tree to be about 70-80 yards away, so just for shits, I went out back and I set up a paper target at 75 and shot..... I was less than 2 inches off |
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Quoted:
I do something similar to boresight. Never got as close as 2 inches though I was amazed.. Ive sighted in countless rifles in my life, Im the go to guy for my buddies as well when it comes to that, so I figured Id try something different today.. I confirmed zero at 100 with a golf ball, and a walnut.. Seems to me my .17 is read for pest control this summer...Damn red squirrels have declared war on my barn, and attic, but everytime I see them they are just out of .22 range ( I have shot them at 125+ with the .22 but .17 is more better at that range, plus they explode) |
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Quoted:
This is why I use a grid target with 1" squares at 50 yards. It's easy to shoot once on the paper and then just count the MOA to get on the bulls-eye. One confirmation shot and I'm good to go. Repeat at my zero range and it's done. This is my go to for New guns/New scopes, but with this situation I thought fuck it, lets think outside the box..... I dont expect it to work 100% of the time, but god damn when I saw where that round hit after removing a scope, installing a new rings, and scope base.... |