Picatinny ‘Scope’ Mounting

And that is nothing like an empirical test!

If that good ol’ boy is right, why do rifle manufacturers put the recoil slots for mounts at the back not the front or have a taper that widens going forwards so the mounts tighten on recoil not come lose!

Maybe they just don’t understand physics - or more likely he doesn’t!

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You've sussed him. The moral of the story is - don't eff with Newton.
 
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And that is nothing like an empirical test!

If that good ol’ boy is right, why do rifle manufacturers put the recoil slots for mounts at the back not the front or have a taper that widens going forwards so the mounts tighten on recoil not come lose!

Maybe they just don’t understand physics - or more likely he doesn’t!

View attachment 459382

View attachment 459383
And similar to the step at the front of the dovetail rails on the Steyr SSG69. But I can recall that when I fitted a moderator to my SSG69 308 there was definitely some rearward movement of the scope/rings. I fitted the MAK steel picatiney rail/appropriate pic rings to it and it stopped any movement.
I guess the SSG69 rifles were produced before moderators became popular and perhaps the moderators produce some barely discernable forward movement (like a muzzle brake) of the rifle and subsequent rearward movement of scope/rings.
 
And that is nothing like an empirical test!

If that good ol’ boy is right, why do rifle manufacturers put the recoil slots for mounts at the back not the front or have a taper that widens going forwards so the mounts tighten on recoil not come lose!

Maybe they just don’t understand physics - or more likely he doesn’t!

View attachment 459382

View attachment 459383
My first centrefire rifle was a Parker Hale 1200 in .270Win. It had the standard Parker Hale blocks and rings which were made of alloy with a steel recoil pin that fitted into a hole in the front block.
The effects of recoil over time resulted in the steel recoil pin peening and slightly puckering the front of the hole into which it fitted, clearly indicating that on firing the rifle recoils reward and the scope tries to stay in the same place. Therefore I would say that this video is wrong.
 
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The real moral of the story is, that whatever you know to be true, there's someone, somewhere on the internet saying you're wrong.
Do what works, don't do what doesn't work, and don't listen to anybody else 👍🏻

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Mount it forwards using a quality rail and rings and torque to the correct spec.

Years of owning and shooting .50bmg, .338LM and other high recoiling rifles on picatinny rails and never once had one shift.
 
Damn it - I’ve always been in the march back camp until recently following advice on here - I rezeroed all my rifles forward. 🙈

Have to say there was bugger all in the difference in zero - maybe a couple of clicks.

As he notes, if it’s torqued up correctly there should be no real drama.
Interesting.but with a heavy scope like the alpex then upon recoil the scope by virtue of it's inertia wants to stay put and let the rifle "slide" backwards beneath it hence forward on the picatiny.🤷
Stalk soon FB ....eh .
 
Maybe it'd be scientific to mount them back and repeat the experiment, he'd definitely tighten them up more though.
The bullet puller demonstration is bs, you'd need to start the hammers journey by firing it from a shot gun cartridge to have any analogy of recoil and a rifle being slowed by a shoulder.
 
Needs to be mounted forward because of the inerertia of the rifle scope.

Its simple physics.

Its a really big factor on light rifles with heavy scopes which seems to be the rage at the moment, and protects the scope from damage through reppetedly being hit essentially
 
I'm pleased I read the comments as well as watched the video because I started to think i had being doing it wrong. I will carry on mounting forward in the slot. My mind says, rifle wants to move back with recoil but scope would like to stay where it is
 
I'm pleased I read the comments as well as watched the video because I started to think i had being doing it wrong. I will carry on mounting forward in the slot. My mind says, rifle wants to move back with recoil but scope would like to stay where it is
You have a good mind :)
 
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