Hi,
Got a good deal on here with a long range setup. 6.5CM on a Tikka. Have a Steiner 5-25 scope with Burris AR rings. Tried doing bore sighting and dabbled at the range, was hitting off board. Tried adjusting with no luck.
Any suggestions or idiot guide to scope mounting videos anyone would suggest
Thanks
FWIW from a fellow noob

:
I'll be sighting in my new rifle/scope next week at the range.
1. Bore sighting at 25 metres to get on paper (and to be safe!).
2. Stretch it to 100 metres to get a good zero.
3. Conduct a tall target test to ensure that I mounted my scope truly level, that my POIs from zero to about 9 mils up are tracking vertically, and to determine whether I need some kind of scope correction factor (see Bryan Litz from Applied Ballistics on this. There's a video for this too).
I'll try to get bore-sighted in as few rounds as possible, but once I'm out to 100m, I'll likely shoot in 5-shot group multiples for both zeroing and tall target testing.
I did a lot of research before deciding on this approach because I have never mounted a scope before - there are a lot of traditions and approaches to this process I've learned, and what you choose partly depends on your application. For me, I intend to shoot some kind of long range precision discipline in the future (1000m). I followed the Paramount Tactical method, made sure to torque everything to manufacturer's spec (spec for the rings-rail, spec for the rings-scope), and to take my time, not rush, and to fix mistakes as they happen, especially when leveling. I used a Wheeler scope mounting level kit. I leveled the scope from the top of my elevation cap that I determined beforehand was perfectly level while using a witness level on my barrel to ensure the rifle remained level at all times.
[The better approach is to use a machinist's parallel and level from the base of your turrent housing, but I don't have a parrallel).
Paramount Tactical has really great, detailed videos on scope mounting and gets you thinking about what to look out for when doing this work. Area 419 (or Gavin from UR?) has a video on wet-mounting scopes, which is interesting. I wet-mounted my scope after watching it because it was easy to do and convincing.
Results are pending; I'll try to follow-up here after my range session.