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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
vortex viper windage problem.
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<blockquote data-quote="gohring3006" data-source="post: 1182541" data-attributes="member: 78762"><p>I bed the rear of all of my one piece rails, if there is a gap after tightening the front screws or not.... I would tend to think that a 6 MOA shift would reveal itself sooner than a month later. I would Rezero it and let it sit for a day or two, and see if it shifts again, or it was a fluke. It may not shift 6 MOA overnight, but I would think it would shift some... Always check the little things first, like the base being loose, the action screws, and... One thing that can throw you off, is the scope shifting in the rings. It doesn't take much rotation of the crosshairs to shift it 6 MOA. You may not see it, but it could have moved. Most of the time, I find loose rings causing problem with my zero. Depending on the rings, it seems some need more than spec to hold a scope...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="gohring3006, post: 1182541, member: 78762"] I bed the rear of all of my one piece rails, if there is a gap after tightening the front screws or not.... I would tend to think that a 6 MOA shift would reveal itself sooner than a month later. I would Rezero it and let it sit for a day or two, and see if it shifts again, or it was a fluke. It may not shift 6 MOA overnight, but I would think it would shift some... Always check the little things first, like the base being loose, the action screws, and... One thing that can throw you off, is the scope shifting in the rings. It doesn't take much rotation of the crosshairs to shift it 6 MOA. You may not see it, but it could have moved. Most of the time, I find loose rings causing problem with my zero. Depending on the rings, it seems some need more than spec to hold a scope... [/QUOTE]
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vortex viper windage problem.
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