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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
Steel vs Aluminum scope bases.
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<blockquote data-quote="nateisw" data-source="post: 633767" data-attributes="member: 44189"><p>Wow. Some of you guys have put A LOT of thought into this subject and I've learned quite a bit from this thread. I've honestly never even thought to use a one piece base to add rigidity to the action. I like Talley lightweight rings and mounts. I don't feel like the extra ounce or two they save makes any real difference, but they seem solidly made and it seems like my scope would fail way before these mounts would. They have never lost zero on me and I think they have a real clean look to them. At around $40 bucks a set, I would definitely buy them again for another hunting rifle. If I ever got into benchrest shooting or very long range target shooting, then maybe a one piece steel base would be better. Thanks for all the knowledge guys!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nateisw, post: 633767, member: 44189"] Wow. Some of you guys have put A LOT of thought into this subject and I've learned quite a bit from this thread. I've honestly never even thought to use a one piece base to add rigidity to the action. I like Talley lightweight rings and mounts. I don't feel like the extra ounce or two they save makes any real difference, but they seem solidly made and it seems like my scope would fail way before these mounts would. They have never lost zero on me and I think they have a real clean look to them. At around $40 bucks a set, I would definitely buy them again for another hunting rifle. If I ever got into benchrest shooting or very long range target shooting, then maybe a one piece steel base would be better. Thanks for all the knowledge guys! [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
Steel vs Aluminum scope bases.
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