I have a Sightron SIII 8-32x56mm. Shouldn't I be putting them all in one hole?
JOKE.
Just some more info base on your guys' inputs thus far...
I'm shooting a Savage PC .308 (figured you'd need to know my gun too...). Action screws are tight. I checked parallax while I was shooting, and it seemed to be right on. I have a Vortex bubble level on my optic, and was keeping the bubble in the same spot consistently from shot to shot.
I just checked my rings and it seems they were a little loose (backed off from where I had torqued them). I have Burris Sig Zee rings, and in the 30mm variety of these rings, there are four screws holding the top piece onto the bottom piece, I think I had them unevenly torqued, letting them back off through recoil...
I'll have to shoot again tomorrow and start from scratch.
Also, on my rings it seems that the top pieces are as tight to the bottom pieces as they can go. Shouldn't there be a bit of a gap there? I'm thinking the rings aren't biting onto the scope as tightly as they should be, and that instead the top ring-piece is bringing up against the bottom ring-piece (giving the illusion of "bite" when I am torquing my ring screws).
The scope seems quite solid, but maybe I should think about getting a 0.010" insert kit. As they would be fatter, maybe I'd be able to make the rings bite the scope body harder (instead of the top ring-piece butting up against the bottom ring-piece). Again, I don't even know if this is an issue. Perhaps there is actually enough bite. I'll have to wait and see tomorrow... The wait is killing me because I want to go shoot some groups NOW!
Tonight I made 20 180gr SMK's over 38.2 grains of H4895 and 40 168gr Hornady HPBT AMAX's over 40.2 grains of the same powder (I ran out of 175 grain SMK's, only have 200 180 SMK's left now ARGHHHHHHH!!!! Close enough to replicate today's conditions? Maybe).
I am!!!!!!
But I'm reloading for $0.70 a shot. I just hate "teaching myself" when I know 10 minutes with an experienced shooter could have me a lot of needless trigger yanking. But I suppose learning this way is the best way to learn, in some respects....