trouble sighting in.
I’m having trouble sighting in my scope. At 15 yrds i am hitting 2″ low from aim point and out of adjustment on the scope. I haven’t tried a longer range yet, figured I’d sight it in in the back yard before I went anywhere with it. Is this normal because of the high scope and will sight in at a longer distance or do I need to shim? The scope is a leapers and maybe the problem but I don’t know. I just want to be able to shoot near and far with a gun.
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I ain’t jnoodles, 😀 and Gay – Lord (AKA BB Peliter) is well, not so well respected here. We have caught him full of crap on a regular basis. And just flat out lying many times.
Sighting in a 10 feet is a big waste of time. Or at least it is if you know anything about shooting at all.
Our guns are easy to bore sight by removing the bottle, and sighting thru the bore when the gun is solidly rested.
1.Use the bore as a peep site. Adjust the scope to match the bore picture. (This is real bore sighting. Not the crutch you see at the gun shop to sight a rifle.) Never-Eever put a mechanical bore sighter in an Air Gun Bbl. Or any other gun that you care about top accuracy in.
2. Re-attach the bottle. With the gun solidly benched and held securely, fire one round using the scope cross hair. DO NOT move the gun. Firmly secure the gun, aim at the bullet hole. While firmly holding the gun on target on the bench, carefully adjust the cross hair to intersect the bulls eye. Or reverse. Sight the bulls eye just like you did with the first shot. Now adjust the scope to intersect the pellet hole. Your scope and pellet are now at the same spot on the target. You are now sighted in with only 1 shot fired. Fire a group now to settle the scope and gun. Adjust if needed. Lower quality scopes some times need this group to settle.
This is a well used bench rest set-up technique.
Mike