Mountainrancher
WKR
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2021
- Messages
- 744
The more I hear people who work at leupold speak the more certain I am becoming that I won’t spend any money on their products.
Thanks. I'll add that thread to my watch list.Please do. This thread has some good ideas of what several of us consider the perfect hunting scope. Can’t remember if you were on there or not but there was discussion about trying to get something going.
They've been advising this for decades. Premier Reticles used to advise the same thing for the Leupold scopes back when they worked directly with Leupold. Still doesn't change the fact that such a high number won't hold zero over time no matter how you dial them. I still have an old MK4 that works properly. It's the only one that ever worked right and hasn't failed over time. A unicornHe said that when you get a new scope, to follow this procedure of turning the elevation and windage back and forth a bunch of times to
spread the lubrication around properly.
Also, always dial "up" to your elevation adjustment, meaning return the turret to zero before dialing an adjustment again.
Do it!!!!As a 20 year employee of an optics manufacturer… That’s not how that works.
These companies are making it more and more tempting to venture into the sporting optics market and make shit that actually works.
I actually already wrote the business plan, MRD, TRD, PRD, etc. over a year ago once I realized what Form and Ryan were trying to achieve. Once I realized they weren’t recommending that people actually drop their scopes, and that there was much more validity to the testing being done, my eyes opened up very wide. Let just say that all of my rifles now use ugly as all heck SWFA scopes…Do it!!!!
Are you sure you are recalling that correctly? For a Weaver, you had to tap (read beat) first to unfreeze to adjust, and, if you liked to shoot(back when ammo was cheap), you pecked lightly to knock it off target, to get to do all over.My Dad always pecked on the Weaver turrets with a screwdriver handle after adjusting.
My recollection is accurate. I have used countless Weavers over the years and generally had good service. I had a few fog up after 40+ years. For at least 25 years, I have used a K8 for testing rifles. I have a 80+ year old model 70 with the original Weaver 330. It has never lost zero in the 15 years I've had it (I wonder what would happen if I tried to adjust it after so many years?). In my opinion, the traditional gold standard for tracking (excluding external adjustment scopes) was always the US made T series Weaver Target scopes. I never found the early Weavers to track well, but they held zero for me.Are you sure you are recalling that correctly? For a Weaver, you had to tap (read beat) first to unfreeze to adjust, and, if you liked to shoot(back when ammo was cheap), you pecked lightly to knock it off target, to get to do all over.
You would only need to do that if he was 380 going down to 325 is the way I read the recommendation. And then probably only down to 300 or so and then up. It makes sense from a mechanical perspective. No way to manufacture a gear system with no runout at all. The question would be how do other manufacturers overcome this fact and why doesn’t Leupold adopt it?Mule deer buck chasing does “he’s 325 but won’t stop. He stopped range him again. He’s 380 now. Ok hang on I have to go back down to my zero and dial back up to 380”. Christ sake.
That's not how it works.Well.......
I had a Nightforce SHV on a pic rail (loctited, torqued, witness marked) survive getting knocked over on some rocks and then a vehicle rollover where it was laying uncased in the back of a 4runner. Zero was right where it was supposed to be after all that. I think Leupold needs to learn from their competition.
Your comment insinuates that the scope does NOT adjust correctly to begin with. Granted, there is always a margin of error. But scopes that are reliable minimize the margin of error so such a process a Lupy suggests, is not necessary at all. That fact strongly suggests that Lupy scopes just don't work.Interesting - I could see the initial 'break in' with spinning the dials a couple of times.
It also makes sense for the greatest level of accuracy to return to zero to make sure that everything is lined up.
I think in the field I wouldn't be doing that at the ranges I'm shooting - but if I was going to be shooting 1500-1600 yards than I would. You would also have the time.