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As mentioned it doesn't matter the height but that you are comfortable behind the scope. If you are then it's fine. If you have to crane your neck then you might need lower.
You may find that your consistent cheek weld requires a lower mount or higher mount.
Not everyone has identical anatomy.
It matters little what others tell you about their set ups. What matters is your NPA in all or your most used shooting position. The stock comb height pays into this as well. What works for me may not for you an vice versa. Experiment and you will find what works best for you.
The guy who said that was a dumbfuckI read somewhere that if you mount the scope too high you could get shot in the head.
I read somewhere that if you mount the scope too high you could get shot in the head.
I think it was here. There was a graph about it.
I equate RIfle Set Up, the same as your seats and mirrors in your car.
if someone moves a mirror or changes the seat position, you will instantly know, we'll all do it. Wife or kids get in the car, move something, we bitch.
Your stock is your seats, the scope is your mirrors, you set them up with the fundamentals in mind as well as shooter comfort. This is why there is NO, One size Fits all Answer... I have terms for trigger too, but people reading it online will freak and take it out of context.
This has been the fallacy of the Shooting Game of Telephone, like getting as low as possible, or mounting the scopes super low with a modern rifle. They give fat men a 6"-9" Harris bipods and wonder why they hurt in the prone position because they say you have to get low, instead of setting it up for their specific body type.