redchinviking
Lil-Rokslider
Another thread made me wonder where everyone sits on this. I feel some think it’s a non-issue and some think it’s a potentially big issue. I have found my turret off a few clicks only a few times in my hunting career but now it makes me prefer a scope with turret locks.
This is really only important when having to take faster shots at shorter ranges because you should or could have more time to check your turrets at reasonably longer ranges but sometimes that’s not a luxury we are always afforded. But in all honesty I would say I usually have time.
Rare as it may be, in my case, this is mostly caused from turrets rubbing on backpack straps as I prefer to use a gun bearer on my pack for long approaches but other times it just happened somewhere along the way with heavy brush and branches.
I guess the next natural question is did it affect the outcome of your hunt? Luckily I can say no to that but a locking turret on a few of my scopes (and a capped windage) now almost always prevents that. Something tells me I’m not alone. Does a turret lock matter to you?
This is really only important when having to take faster shots at shorter ranges because you should or could have more time to check your turrets at reasonably longer ranges but sometimes that’s not a luxury we are always afforded. But in all honesty I would say I usually have time.
Rare as it may be, in my case, this is mostly caused from turrets rubbing on backpack straps as I prefer to use a gun bearer on my pack for long approaches but other times it just happened somewhere along the way with heavy brush and branches.
I guess the next natural question is did it affect the outcome of your hunt? Luckily I can say no to that but a locking turret on a few of my scopes (and a capped windage) now almost always prevents that. Something tells me I’m not alone. Does a turret lock matter to you?