Steve300xcw
WKR
- Joined
- Oct 19, 2017
- Messages
- 945
Why do you even need a level for a 450yrd max rifle?
How did you quantify that they were off 0.5°?So you guys think it's normal. I understand. I wonder why they will replace all the rings and even said at the phone that these kind of issues are very rare amd they eill fix it. And i wonder why all the levels are off in the same exact way if it is so difficult to manufacture them for all the tolerances adding up..
Because i hunt smaller game than ehat you are used to, being in Europe. And because I want to be as accurate as possible. And because i hunt in hills amd mountains. And because i want to shoot at the range much further awayWhy do you even need a level for a 450yrd max rifle?
How did you quantify that they were off 0.5°?
And how do you level your scope?
1) i used some precise professional macchine my neighboor has, under his supervision. And the results were confirmed by the bubble level touching the line (as a reference there is a very nice post with various bubble levels, off of about 0.5 degrees, on a famous precision shooting forum) and i even checked with the level app of my phone (which turned out to be extremely accurate, at least in this appllication). I wrote 0.5 degrees but the actual cant is between 0.5 and 0.7 for all the 4 rings.
2) plumb line
How did you physically place the ring on the precise proffesional machine your neighbor has?
(We'll just ignore the fact that you can still do #2 completely unhindered here)
Because i hunt smaller game than ehat you are used to, being in Europe. And because I want to be as accurate as possible. And because i hunt in hills amd mountains. And because i want to shoot at the range much further away
Brand? Not sure why you didnt share that…I recently bought several sets of rings from a reputable brand, very appreciated on forums. They look good quality. They have an integral level in the base. I opted for that model based on reputation and onnthe fact that the level, placed in the base of the front ring on the left, looked like a good compromise for a 450 yards max hunting rifle. This way i am able to check the level when rarely needed but at the same time the level doesn't stick out too much, keeping the rifle convenient to carry.
I made a test and found out that ALL the 4 rings i have, bought in a 1 year timespawn, have the level.. out of level! It's just a matter of half a degree and i know that, as long as the reticle is plumb to the bubble level, the level being off (and thus the rifle being canted) 0.5 degrees is no big deal, especially for the distances i am shooting at. That said, every one of the level is canted in the same exact direction and everyone is off by 0.5 degrees (i checked with multile levels whit rings mounted and torqued on a high quality integral scope base and using multiple levels i know to be on spot as a reference).
1) how is this possible? For at least 1 year a reputable brand (i will not say the name of the brand because they have been great in assisting me and accorded a full refund) produced defective rings?
2) what do you think about my reasoning about the placement of the level in the base of the ring? I have seem some drawbacks (mostly low visibility on the bubble in low light conditions, level out of focus being very close to my eyes but still visible, until i am young) but i like the fact that the level doesn't stick out
Thanks guys!
No, it's a fact. You just match the reticle to the level, just like all other level products work. Feel free to explain how your bubble level was defective to the point where you couldnt make the reticle match it."Ignore"? You mean "assume" i guess..
Literally nothing you have said is an indication that any "problem" has been "verified".Btw man, don't worry about how i verified that there is a problem. The question was "is this acceptable to you?".
Yes. Because at the end of the day, the user still needs to MANUALLY match the reticle to the level... it is an imperfect process, so the bubble level being "imperfectly" level to the rest of the rifle matters literally zero. You are "calibrating" everything to be true anyway when you mount the scopeSo, would it be acceptable to you to pay 200 usd for a parte of ring with a bubble canted 0.5 degrees so that the bubble touche one of the two reference lines when the rifle is level?
I'd be shocked if it was not. I am an engineer who used to be in manufacturing. No "bubble level installation expertise" lol, just lots of machining and sheet metal.Do you really think it is inside the margin of error for this manufacturing process but still they refund me and they managed to make at least 4 rings with bubbles all canted in the same exact way?
Most of your points showed you just didn't read or didn't understand what i am asking and what i wrote.No, it's a fact. You just match the reticle to the level, just like all other level products work. Feel free to explain how your bubble level was defective to the point where you couldnt make the reticle match it.
Literally nothing you have said is an indication that any "problem" has been "verified".
I'm trying to help you (and future readers) through the thought process of how this all works. If you just set the rings down on top of a flat, level surface that would be invalid test. You would need them clamped to a rail, then that rail set down on the leveling surface for the measurement. But hey, forget I mentioned it. You came to complain and hear what you want
Yes. Because at the end of the day, the user still needs to MANUALLY match the reticle to the level... it is an imperfect process, so the bubble level being "imperfectly" level to the rest of the rifle matters literally zero. You are "calibrating" everything to be true anyway when you mount the scope
I'd be shocked if it was not. I am an engineer who used to be in manufacturing. No "bubble level installation expertise" lol, just lots of machining and sheet metal.
Let us know what the new rings do. Many companies will just replace things because some customers are impossible to work with.
Not once did you mention reticle plumbness relative the bore as being your worry. But if that is your worry, I'd just like to say that is a largely overblown issueMost of your points showed you just didn't read or didn't understand what i am asking and what i wrote.
I do level the reticle to the bubble, always, and i know this is the most important factor. Still, a canted rifle will produce an incremental error the more you mive away from the zero point. That's just math and you being an engineer should get it.
Addutuonally, i verified everything exactly as you wrote.
It is not impossible. Simply not financially feasible. As the math shows, there is no practical advantage gained by a dead-nuts perfect level. And to manufacture such a level gets expensive fast. Stuff like that doesnt sell. If zeiss does manufacture such a thing, tickle me impressedCould you explain why would it be impossible to make a ring eoth an integrated level reliably and repeteably?
0.5° cant error with a 2" height over bore zeroed at 100 yards is a windage error of 0.017" per 100 yards.
So if you have a perfect 100 zero on your 450 yard rifle, it will have a built in angular misalignment causing a 0.061" windage error at 450. Less than a 1/16"
If you cannot dial for the error, it is too small to matter. The 0.5 degree offset of reticle to bore produces less than 0.02 MOA of error. At best, your scope dials to 0.125 MOA per click. Of course you are in Europe, so error is less than 0.01 MRAD, and at best your clicks are 0.05 MRAD (or 0.5 cm depending on your scope). So, at 2000 meters the 0.5 degree offset produces less than 2 cm of error. At 500 meters it produces 0.5 cm of error, are you knocking birds heads off at 500 meters? Can you call wind within 0.2 mph?I do level the reticle to the bubble, always, and i know this is the most important factor. Still, a canted rifle will produce an incremental error the more you mive away from the zero point. That's just math and you being an engineer should get it.
Addutuonally, i verified everything exactly as you wrote.
0.5° cant error with a 2" height over bore zeroed at 100 yards is a windage error of 0.017" per 100 yards.
So if you have a perfect 100 zero on your 450 yard rifle, it will have a built in angular misalignment causing a 0.061" windage error at 450. Less than a 1/16"
Why are you concerned about my reply on the motivations for a level mounted on this rifle?Why do you even need a level for a 450yrd max rifle?
OkLevels on rings are near worthless anyways. Ignore it. Get an offset level if you want one.
It is not a 450 yard rifle, i just said i will not shoot past that distance while HUNTING.Not once did you mention reticle plumbness relative the bore as being your worry. But if that is your worry, I'd just like to say that is a largely overblown issue
0.5° cant error with a 2" height over bore zeroed at 100 yards is a windage error of 0.017" per 100 yards.
So if you have a perfect 100 zero on your 450 yard rifle, it will have a built in angular misalignment causing a 0.061" windage error at 450. Less than a 1/16"
It is not impossible. Simply not financially feasible. As the math shows, there is no practical advantage gained by a dead-nuts perfect level. And to manufacture such a level gets expensive fast. Stuff like that doesnt sell. If zeiss does manufacture such a thing, tickle me impressed
but most importantly, I am not a huge fan of scope ring levels. They are not as easy to see as an offset
I don't understand why you guys assume i will shoot at 450 yards max with this rifle. I wrote many times that's not the case.If you cannot dial for the error, it is too small to matter. The 0.5 degree offset of reticle to bore produces less than 0.02 MOA of error. At best, your scope dials to 0.125 MOA per click. Of course you are in Europe, so error is less than 0.01 MRAD, and at best your clicks are 0.05 MRAD (or 0.5 cm depending on your scope). So, at 2000 meters the 0.5 degree offset produces less than 2 cm of error. At 500 meters it produces 0.5 cm of error, are you knocking birds heads off at 500 meters? Can you call wind within 0.2 mph?
AKA, you are chasing dust as the saying goes in surveying.
To answer the question, yes I would be just fine with that degree of error in a scope ring level. I use tube mounted levels, just torquing the screw to secure it is enough to make me uncertain if it might be off by 0.5 degrees.
I did trust @Shortschaf math. I've figured it for myself once, but decided to save time.
I assure you it has less to do with the machining of the rings than it does tolerance in the vial, bedding and perception.
Nobody produces rings on a manual machine and fitting a base on an action will have the amount of deviation you see. If you have these mounted on an integral rail action please drop a pic of the action in a vise with a protactor across the pic and again across the rings.
It's possible your supplier sourced some bogus vials....but not likely.