Lawnboi
WKR
Instead of focusing on zeroing I’ll leave this.
Why in the hell does someone care what their rifle will do when not being operated as it would in the field? False confidence, and perception that their rifle will do it in the moment when they need to is a bunch of bull. Hunters need to get off the flippin bench and shoot like you do in the field if you want to truly become proficient. Hurt feelings be damned.
Save your money, and the time lugging that junk around and spend it on ammo and shooting.
That said I do agree with the OP. I don’t think most are zeroing to the degree that they will see a difference, but many are. I see the lead sleds as a gimmick.
As to the tripod comment above, absolutely it can change your poi. That’s why we test, and confirm that when on the rifle in those positions dosnt create a shift. I can absolutely create a shift by pushing more or less into my rifle. Is it much? Usually not, probably acceptable by most hunters standards. But it’s enough to show itself.
Why in the hell does someone care what their rifle will do when not being operated as it would in the field? False confidence, and perception that their rifle will do it in the moment when they need to is a bunch of bull. Hunters need to get off the flippin bench and shoot like you do in the field if you want to truly become proficient. Hurt feelings be damned.
Save your money, and the time lugging that junk around and spend it on ammo and shooting.
That said I do agree with the OP. I don’t think most are zeroing to the degree that they will see a difference, but many are. I see the lead sleds as a gimmick.
As to the tripod comment above, absolutely it can change your poi. That’s why we test, and confirm that when on the rifle in those positions dosnt create a shift. I can absolutely create a shift by pushing more or less into my rifle. Is it much? Usually not, probably acceptable by most hunters standards. But it’s enough to show itself.