No idea. That’s why I am going to keep shooting this and see what happens. If it loses zero, then good, learned something. If it doesn’t, then good, learned something.I've personally seen, actually in person not on the internet, 6 Mark 5's lose zero on known/good guns. I have zero experience with the newer Mark 4's...
Are there design differences in the Mark 4's from the Mark 5's to indicate they may be a better designed scope?
No idea. That’s why I am going to keep shooting this and see what happens. If it loses zero, then good, learned something. If it doesn’t, then good, learned something.
I have a year before this rifle will go hunting. There will be a lot more shooting it by then.
Have not. I can do that next time.Have you run a tall target test? I’d like to see that
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You could make this way less convoluted, if you were driving the rifle, instead of the rifle driving you. A zeroed scope puts holes in the delineated point of aim. I guess you could draw an actual point of aim on the target, after shooting. But it would be way better to just put the bullets in the bullseye. Not being a smart ass, and I do much appreciate the testing of this scope. But the target you posted looks exactly like targets I have shot, with scopes that lost zero.Inhale, slowly exhale, focus on sight alignment, trigger squeeze begins, time my trigger break with bottom of my exhale, shot goes off, small bump in sight picture, reticle after firing is low. Get sight alignment again, repeat. Realize the natural out of aim is low and I am forcing the rifle up by tightening my rear support hand.
Decide to reposition bags. Now rifle has a better natural point of aim. Reticle is staying centered without muscle tension. Repeat shooting sequence. Shots break, sight picture hops, lands back real close to the original plane. Barely have to shift body. Repeat shot sequence… etc etc
This is like arguing with Rain Man.
So when a shooter doesn’t have a perfect position and the bullets don’t impact the bullseye, then the shooter recognizes their mistake, then corrects their position and shoots the bullseye, the zero has shifted?
Some of you are acting as if the rifle is held in a mechanical vice being shot in a controlled environment.
If this was about my Maven, the comments would be about shooting fundamentals.
Next time, I will only post my shots after I shoot a few and get in the groove, then shoot a fresh target.
Speaking of Maven. Here are my last three groups I shot before my CO trip. All same loads on the same paper. 1st, 2nd, 3rd.
First group sucked and was way low. Gathered myself, repositioned and shot again. Chilled for a bit and shot again.
I see a trend. First group low. Too much pull on trigger, dipping rifle? Rear bag not positioned right?… I don’t remember. But to shoot my best takes a few rounds. I am not a machine.
Again, I am not trying to be a jerk. However, that you are not able to lay down control shots into the center, and therefor have such dramatic shifts in POI based on you alone (that’s what you are saying here), means that none of you zero or not zeroed target can be trusted.
You have over a 2.5 MOA shift in your base zero apparently from you alone- you aren’t able to see anything about your first shot to check zero, because you aren’t able to control to rifle to sub 2.5 MOA. And, it’s not that you have a round and centered 2.5 MOA group which can give information- you are randomly and uncontrollably shifting elevation.
Maybe that Leupold holds zero- but you can’t say with that much error involved. Maybe the Maven loses zero- but you can’t say with that much error involved.
Unequivocally the Mark 4 HD eval scope is shift zero by .1 to .3 miks vertically- in effect turning a 1.2 MOA rifle into a 2.5 MOA vertical system. You would not be able to tell that, because you are already introducing a massive vertical component- and would just excuse the shifts to that.
One of the things you've mentioned in the podcasts that's really caught my attention is the discussion about how much people's groups get bigger when they break position after every shot. I've paid attention to my own 10 shot groups since then (usually shot without breaking position) and noticed that I sometimes I have little shifts from one range trip to the next. Then I wonder if the shift is the result of not enough shots to get a true zero or if it is from changes in positioning or shooting technique. What's the largest change in group size you've seen between shooting with and without breaking position. From the podcast it seems like a couple inch shifts aren't unusual.
I need to start shooting groups while breaking position, I just usually forget. Do you have a recommendation on how to train so that group size while breaking position doesn't grow? My assumption has been you will tell me to train getting square behind the rifle and work on maintaining sight picture through the shot.
Haha, ok. When I submit my peer reviewed paper to Scientific American on zero retention in hunting rifles, I’ll ensure to remove the human element.
Until then, I will keep shooting with my friends and family on Sundays… I’ll just make sure they don’t talk while I’m shooting since it’s really serious business to shoot my A-game 100% of the time, right from the start with zero warm up so I can post on the internet.
You do realize that even including my first 5 round group (the low one, before I adjusted my bags better) is still 1.87 MOA for 14 shots right? With 50% of those in a 1 MOA center. I don’t see ball busting in the “post your 10 round Tikka group thread” to those shooting 1.5 MOA 10 round groups.
Again, if I switched targets from first group to second, no one would be saying anything…
then again, it is a Leupold thread, so if all shots weren’t one hole, it would be zero shift.