I bought a Savage 111 package gun about 10 years ago that came with a low-end Bushnell in place of the Simmons that was apparently spec'd on these.
On opening morning last fall, I was eyeing up a mulie about 200m out on a powerline. I could see that it would fit in the freezer but was having a hard time seeing if that was an ear or a spike. At first I thought it was because of the typical rain mist of a west coast dawn, but it was the scope fogging up.
Long story short, didn't take a shot...and didn't see another buck all season.
Before I left my spot that morning, I dug out my phone and ordered a Vortex I'd been looking at (which has been great).
I recently took the Bushnell out of the box to figure out what had happened. I unscrewed the eyepiece because I could hear that lens rattling. It appears the locking ring that holds the lens had become cross threaded, presumably from the recoil of probably a thousand rounds of 30-06. I backed out the ring and the threads appeared to be fine. I threaded it back in by hand until it tightened against the glass without any signs of the splinters that normally indicate blown out fine threads in aluminum.
Now that it's physically back together, I'm thinking I'd like to give it an easy retirement onto a 10/22 that I use for grouse.
TL DR:
Is there somewhere (preferably in or around Vancouver) that can purge the scope with nitrogen to get the humidity out ? Bear in mind this is a cheap scope.
The threads on the retaining appeared to be dry. Is there a downside to putting blue loctite on them ? That .22 rides on the front of the quad whenever chickens are open.
Thx all.
On opening morning last fall, I was eyeing up a mulie about 200m out on a powerline. I could see that it would fit in the freezer but was having a hard time seeing if that was an ear or a spike. At first I thought it was because of the typical rain mist of a west coast dawn, but it was the scope fogging up.
Long story short, didn't take a shot...and didn't see another buck all season.
Before I left my spot that morning, I dug out my phone and ordered a Vortex I'd been looking at (which has been great).
I recently took the Bushnell out of the box to figure out what had happened. I unscrewed the eyepiece because I could hear that lens rattling. It appears the locking ring that holds the lens had become cross threaded, presumably from the recoil of probably a thousand rounds of 30-06. I backed out the ring and the threads appeared to be fine. I threaded it back in by hand until it tightened against the glass without any signs of the splinters that normally indicate blown out fine threads in aluminum.
Now that it's physically back together, I'm thinking I'd like to give it an easy retirement onto a 10/22 that I use for grouse.
TL DR:
Is there somewhere (preferably in or around Vancouver) that can purge the scope with nitrogen to get the humidity out ? Bear in mind this is a cheap scope.
The threads on the retaining appeared to be dry. Is there a downside to putting blue loctite on them ? That .22 rides on the front of the quad whenever chickens are open.
Thx all.




















































