Solid gold.........
35WhelenAI said:
Form quote: "Once you get into statistical relevant shot groups sizes (95% probability), very few hunting rifles are under 2 MOA".
Many here are panty-wadding about .5 MOA scope shift and their gun won't do 2.0 MOA at the bench. Factor in shooter error when the time comes to squeeze the trigger, and no wonder poster child scopes with .5 MOA shift kill a shit load of game in the field.
Most people aren't good enough shots to know if a .5MOA shift is shooter error, scope mounts, screws, bedding shift, ammo variability, wind, or whatever else. It's easy to blame the scope.
If that is the situation then fair enough—if we were only talking about .5moa shifts I would not care anywhere close to as much, and Id probably still own several. But I dont think thats the situation most people are talking about, and it was not MY situatiion. I had 3 out of four vx scopes that would inexplicably wander as much as 3-4 moa, frequently around 2moa, with nothing done to the scope, just easy trips to the range. Let me say that again—there was NO impact, not even a minor one, that could trigger a zero-check. When my 100-yard group is 3-4 inches off from where I left it after zeroing with a 10-shot group, even with a 3-4moa gun that is easy to see. It’s night and day with a 2moa gun, those groups dont even overlap. When I stack it on top of my wobble, thats a miss or a wound on a deer well inside 300 yards. Also, when I change NOTHING except put a different scope into the same rings and it instantly tightens groups (same ammo) and stops wandering, and then when I put the vx back in and it starts all over again…its easy to definitively say it was the scope.
I returned 2 of these to leupold and they acknowledged there was a problem with them, the most recent being just this past summer. One they replaced, the other they said they repaired. The first one I sold the rifle and scope before I realized what was happening. And the last I never had a problem with—I personally have owned a leupold scope that held zero for the couple years I owned it. (!!!). But with a 75% failure rate for me personally, confirmed with several hundred $ of my own ammo and double-confirmed by the company acknowledging there was a problem, why wouldnt I pay attention to a process that aligns with my experience, and why wouldnt I strongly recommend scopes that I havent had the same problems with?
@JGRaider @35WhelenAI —if you guys were in my shoes and had had those scopes fail like that, would YOU use or recommend them?
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