Here we go again. New scope (USO SN-3s), new rings, mounted scope using two
feeler gauges. Was very careful, turret assembly very large, easy to get to from diff. angles, nothing better to do, torqued to specs. Looked good, reticle was at top of rings, middle of rail.
Now here is the interesting part:
Put One Hole Groups leveling device on scope WITHOUT looking at bubble level.
Looking through the scope, aligned the vert. posts with a plumb line 40 ft. away.
Bubble was out by 1/2! Yes, half a bubble off. The diff between the plumb line and the vert posts on reticle was less than 1/2 the width of the post, which tells me that the bubble level/plumb line can be very accurate in determining true up/down. Duh, 997/2man, we knew that. Yes, but I didn't think that being off by less than 1/2 the width of the reticle (2 minutes, IIRC) would displace the bubble so much, in this case just about 1/2 a bubble.
Now you are saying "997 is full of shit". Not so fast, try it yourself. I wanted the feeler gauges to be more accurate, but it looks like the level/plumb is the way to go for me. To test it, tomorrow at the range, bringing my 4' level, drawing a true vertical line on the target, will run my groups 1-3 feet up, see what happens. If the rounds stay on the line, I think that I'm gtg.
I didn't think that being just a little off (less than the width of the reticle post) would put the bubble so far off, like obviously waaay off.
997/2man
feeler gauges. Was very careful, turret assembly very large, easy to get to from diff. angles, nothing better to do, torqued to specs. Looked good, reticle was at top of rings, middle of rail.
Now here is the interesting part:
Put One Hole Groups leveling device on scope WITHOUT looking at bubble level.
Looking through the scope, aligned the vert. posts with a plumb line 40 ft. away.
Bubble was out by 1/2! Yes, half a bubble off. The diff between the plumb line and the vert posts on reticle was less than 1/2 the width of the post, which tells me that the bubble level/plumb line can be very accurate in determining true up/down. Duh, 997/2man, we knew that. Yes, but I didn't think that being off by less than 1/2 the width of the reticle (2 minutes, IIRC) would displace the bubble so much, in this case just about 1/2 a bubble.
Now you are saying "997 is full of shit". Not so fast, try it yourself. I wanted the feeler gauges to be more accurate, but it looks like the level/plumb is the way to go for me. To test it, tomorrow at the range, bringing my 4' level, drawing a true vertical line on the target, will run my groups 1-3 feet up, see what happens. If the rounds stay on the line, I think that I'm gtg.
I didn't think that being just a little off (less than the width of the reticle post) would put the bubble so far off, like obviously waaay off.
997/2man