Sighting in

fuel80guy

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I don't have a bore sighted.I went to sight my new scope in and I've adjusted it all the down to the limits and it's still shooting high.
Could anybody guide me what to do next.
 
Yes, we need a bit more info.
Which rifle?
Mount base: one or two piece?
To get it to shoot lower, you must lower the rear or raise the front of the scope.
This is quite simple with a one-piece base.
Much more complicated with the two-piece.
Eagleye.
 
My scope is a Redfield revenge and millet rings on a savage axis factory installed bases.
It has been suggested to me that perhaps the scope rings are on wrong as there may be a front and a back ring.
 
thought the axis where the same height of baes. the savages are

take the caps off the top of the rings and see how the scope sits . you should be able to tell if it right or wrong

i would be leaning toward the bases being wrong or not tight?? . .

unless your scope is crap. mine is.. dial down 10 moa at 100 yards and it move 3 inchs. seems now its jumping back and forth by 2 inch vertically..

one more test til it goes back to factory
 
you shouldn't have had to shim .

MY WORD ..
i just checked out redfields site. your maxed out down and you have 70 moa of adjustment in that scope. providing you have a 3-9

you need a 15 tho shim in the front says my cacultions

19 tho will move you down 70 moa on a 4 inch mount

BUT talk about twisting your scope last time i checked glass dont like to be bent
 
I have a 4x12 and shimmed the scope and still can't get it low enough.
At 30 yds its shooting 4 " high,,,back to the drawing board.
 
I don't have a bore sighted.I went to sight my new scope in and I've adjusted it all the down to the limits and it's still shooting high.
Could anybody guide me what to do next.

Go to silverdale and shoot at 25 yards and then 50,
100 yards. Once you are on a 25 the rest is easy.
 
I have a 4x12 and shimmed the scope and still can't get it low enough.
At 30 yds its shooting 4 " high,,,back to the drawing board.

Take the scope and put it on again. Get it boresighted again.
30 yards and 4 inches high makes no sense. Once you boresighted you can check wind
and elevation.
 
I put original rings that came on my axis back on gun and recounted scope.
I've bottomed out elevation and I'm still 4" high at 100 yds.
I'm guessing I will have to shim scope base.
 
Four inches high at 100 is usable, depending on what it is that you intend to use the rifle for. As a target or varmint rifle it will be a bit of a pain, but you can get by if you use it as a big game rifle. If, for example, you have a duplex reticle, you can make use of the ends of the wide post sections as hold off points; the bottom of the top one will bring you close to zero at near range targets, hold center for moderate range, and use the top of the bottom post for long shots. Likewise, the left and right posts can be used to hold off for windage.

I suggest you pick a single load to use in your rifle, either factory or a handload, and work with it until you are able to fine tune the holdoffs at specific ranges. Now the chances are that the hold offs right on the post ends will not coincide with the range when measured in whole hundreds of yards (100, 200, 300 etc) but you will quickly learn where the hold needs to be relative to the post ends and the cross hair at specific ranges.

The first step though is to put up a 12" target and learn what that looks like through your scope. At what range and at what power does your cross hair and post end bracket that target. Congratulations, now you're using your scope as a range finder as well as a sighting aid. Now if luck is with you, perhaps if you shoot with your target bracketed between the cross hair and the top post, you will get a center hit on your 100 yard target. You might get a 300 center hit using the cross hair, so what hold do you need for a 200 yard shot or a 400 yard shot? Record the results, one of those write in the rain pocket sized notebooks is handy. The more you use this system, the easier it will become.
 
This is a varmint rifle so 4" high at 100 yds doesn't work.
Ive worked up a load that this gun shoots very well so I'm thinking I need to shim scope base.
 
Throw the factory two piece bases away.
Mount a one-piece base of your choice.
Shim the front of the base to raise it at the front.
Problem solved.
Do Not shim the front or rear only of two piece bases, that will cause ring misalignment and may damage your scope.
Regards, Eagleye.
 
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