Or the turrets were played with, or every mount is different, or some adjustment was used during boresighting that wasn't discussed, etc. The Burris has more range than the Leupold.
A scope with matching optical and mechanical zero has about 0 chance of being the cause of an alignment issue...
If it doesn't have electronics, it will probably be obsolete within 20 years, but will certainly still be useful beyond that. Anything electronic (think rangefinder) is probably a paperweight after ~10-15 years.
in an AR with an LPVO you can see your rail, muzzle device, can, etc.
Anything with a wide enough field of view you're going to get the muzzle device. The positive is that usually the only thing it's obscuring is the ground immediately in front of you.
"All other things being equal" is the problem there. The same scope can be mounted twice in the same rings to the same rifle and have a different zero.
Pretty easy for OP to confirm an issue with the scope. Put it in the lower ring halves with the scope optically centered, then, without moving...
OP, before you go through the trouble of reaching out to Leupold, shipping them your scope, and having them do this when it gets there, follow the above video to get your scope optically centered. When it's optically centered, see if it's also mechanically centered (equal number of clicks center...
Right, 10 scopes and 10 rifles have nothing to do with subbing 1 scope on 1 rifle. I'm more inclined to think there's potentially a scope issue if you put the scope on a completely different rifle in completely different mounts and it maxes the same way, but subbing scope A for B doesn't tell...
You can just put the scope you're questioning on a mirror, center the reflected reticle (optical center) and verify that the scope has the same adjustment for impact left and right from center to stop.
EDIT: Putting scope A in a set of rings and comparing it to scope B just tells you that when...
I think the Leupold 3-9s have 60 MOA of windage, so you're off center 30 MOA plus 4".
That's a lot. The Leupold rings or the Burris dovetails with windage adjustment will take care of it.
Swaro released the EL Range TA in 2021. The previous version was around since 2012 with some cosmetic updates in 2015.
I'd put the odds of an NL Range in 2024/5 at roughly 0 since they just released the EL Range TA 3 years ago.
LOL, congrats, you just bought Gray Market goods from 6th Ave. Warranty on these is the European one. (5 years parts n labor, then 5 years parts, then nothing.
Might want to return it and contact a site sponsor for discount instead.
It can be done for anyone with alien eyes...
Swaro probably isn't interested in making their eyepieces worse for the small collection of people who would put 2 of them in a bracket.
-Cover both barrels.
-hold down the menu button until the menu comes up
-adjust the right diopter until the display is crisp and focused.
-exit the menu
-find an object 20 ft away
-uncover the right barrel and focus on that object 20 ft away using the focus dial until it's crisp and focused...
They launched a bino with camera and video capability that has onboard image recognition. They no longer need a person to be an avid birder, just interested in being outdoors, wanting to capture photos/ videos of what they see, and having enough disposable income to afford their price.