Musketeer
Well-Known Member
Yesterday I fitted a new scope to my rifle and set about zeroing it. I use a workmate and a piece of ply as a bench and a folding chair to get comfortable. I bore sighted and found that at 50 yards I was already on the paper. Within a few shots, I had it nicely grouped (1") although not perfect in the centre of the target.
I moved the target out to 100 yards and expected the poi to be close to the poa but it was 3 inches out and 2 inch group. I spent the next hour chasing zero around the poa without quite getting there. Click-click up, click-click right , then back again, It became very frustrating and I was clock watching as I had to go and do the school run. In the last few minutes, I moved the target back to 50 yards and adjusted it back to a pretty reasonable zero, a group of half an inch (3 shots), then put everything away for another day.
Shooting paper is much harder than shooting rabbits....
I know the wind had picked up after I moved out to 100 yards but not enough to make a difference (I would have thought).
Currently regretting changing over scopes as the one I removed was set up nicely
I moved the target out to 100 yards and expected the poi to be close to the poa but it was 3 inches out and 2 inch group. I spent the next hour chasing zero around the poa without quite getting there. Click-click up, click-click right , then back again, It became very frustrating and I was clock watching as I had to go and do the school run. In the last few minutes, I moved the target back to 50 yards and adjusted it back to a pretty reasonable zero, a group of half an inch (3 shots), then put everything away for another day.
Shooting paper is much harder than shooting rabbits....
I know the wind had picked up after I moved out to 100 yards but not enough to make a difference (I would have thought).
Currently regretting changing over scopes as the one I removed was set up nicely


