Innomounts maintained zero?

I was used to original blaser mounts which were perfect but then had I case where I couldn't get the scope back enough with factory mounts so had to use innomounts. Had my doubts but so far so good no poi change in the last 6 months, I checked just the other day. I read some bad experiences somewhere a while back though. I think if you don't bang the scope into something hard, the innomounts should be fine.
 
Yes - have three sets that all retain good zero.

Key is pushing forward on the pic rail for a repetitive fit.

Second is when mounting and setting up for the first time, make them pretty tight to release (semi hard push button) and then put a drip of loctite 243 on the cam nuts to ensure they remain tight. 👍
 
Mate of mine tried scope swapping on Sauer using Innomounts.
Sadly they didn’t hold an exact zero when swapping scope between different rifles but to be fair, I think that’s possibly a step above what they were designed for.
Too many variables I suppose.
 
Mate of mine tried scope swapping on Sauer using Innomounts.
Sadly they didn’t hold an exact zero when swapping scope between different rifles but to be fair, I think that’s possibly a step above what they were designed for.
Too many variables I suppose.
You need the zero version for changing between rifles. One rifle two different scopes is fine with the standard though.
 
Mate of mine tried scope swapping on Sauer using Innomounts.
Sadly they didn’t hold an exact zero when swapping scope between different rifles but to be fair, I think that’s possibly a step above what they were designed for.
Too many variables I suppose.
The push button Innomount is for on and off one rifle only. All rails have differeht tolerances so you would have one that is clamped correctly and another that's too loose.

For swapping between several rifles you need the 'Zero' version of the Innomount which has built in torque limiters on the knobs. It's very good.

With any picatinny / weaver QR mount, as @FISH BOY says, push it forward and tighten front then rear. Do it the same every time. Another important step is to mount and dismount the scope 5-10 times before zeroing. This will remove any high spots on the mount or rail and bed it in for maximum repeatability.

On a torqued mount, using this method I have measured the POI shift to be under 2.5mm at 100m on our jig.


Cheers





Clive
 
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