I drop my Tikkas for fun. JK, sort of, I have started dropping them on padded surfaces prior to my shooting practice to make sure they don't lose zero. I have "known" scopes and rings, but still want to identify any weakness in my system, ie mounting issues or action bolt torque changing etc.Yep this now adds something to my setup I had not considered before. A proof test.... but do I really want to drop my rifle.... ugh. Guess I should if I really want to be able to have confidence in my setup if I have a drop in the field. In aerospace we typically do a 1.5x proof with 5 min hold for static loads.... this is not static though.... with so many different variables (angles, surface hardness, etc.) In reality, I do not think you could ever fully qualify a rifle system to the point that with 100% confidence it has still retained zero after a significant drop.
Unless.... maybe I should open up a shop with a vibration and shock table and then produce some sort of qualification program for rifles setups... send the rifle in, put it through the house of pain, if it passes -- you have a field qualified setup for XXX condition... something like that would be the only way.
I like this test.... I also think if you take these results incorrectly you are giving yourself a false sense of confidence. It does not matter what rifle and scope setup you have. I do not think anyone can operate under the assumption it has still retained zero unless you have done truly extensive testing with your own setup... Testing that would probably make your setup look like shit... so I doubt very few are actually going to do it.
I'm not dropping my "nicer" hunting rifle, it has a known weak point in the Talley rings, I'll address that eventually.
