Was chasing a wandering POI on my TX200 and I narrowed it down to the usual suspects:
1. me
2. rifle
3. scope
4. environment
#4 was easy to eliminate. Shot in a controlled environment indoors (stable temp, no wind and adequate lighting etc). The wandering POI was still there.
While doing the usual Google research on the topic...one suggestion was to use an iron sight to differentiate between a rifle or scope issue.
Unfortunately, the TX200 was not designed with iron sight. I would have to red neck/duct tape a post to the front and hunt for a rear dovetail iron sight. Plus with my aging eye, shooting iron sights was never a favorite activity of mine.
Luckily, Amazon provided a budget alternative. A Laser sight. After forking over $12 and change, I was sent one of these little gem.
Taking off the scope completely and mounting the laser would mean that I would have to track and hold the little red dot on target at 10-15 yards. Not ideal with my aging eyes. So I decided to leave the scope on and mount the laser sight below the scope.
So here's the theory. If the scope is shifting and producing the wandering POI, the laser sight should be able to detect the shift.
Assuming the POI shift only originates from one source. Assuming all screws are snug (checked and triple checked). Benching the gun to eliminate some shooter error.
Testing at a magnification of 50X (10-15 yards) ...the budget "laser" dot is too spread out on paper for accurate tracking ...(might need to spend more money for a "real" green laser?). Magnification of 25X shows some promise.
Adjustment screws on the budget "laser" sight is iffy...A drop of thread locker might be in the future. OR more cash to Amazon for a better product.
Don't know if anyone has used a laser sight coupled with a scope to troubleshoot a wander POI before..limited Google search was a negative.
So stay tuned. This saga is not over. Money and time are the only limiting factors.
1. me
2. rifle
3. scope
4. environment
#4 was easy to eliminate. Shot in a controlled environment indoors (stable temp, no wind and adequate lighting etc). The wandering POI was still there.
While doing the usual Google research on the topic...one suggestion was to use an iron sight to differentiate between a rifle or scope issue.
Unfortunately, the TX200 was not designed with iron sight. I would have to red neck/duct tape a post to the front and hunt for a rear dovetail iron sight. Plus with my aging eye, shooting iron sights was never a favorite activity of mine.
Luckily, Amazon provided a budget alternative. A Laser sight. After forking over $12 and change, I was sent one of these little gem.
Taking off the scope completely and mounting the laser would mean that I would have to track and hold the little red dot on target at 10-15 yards. Not ideal with my aging eyes. So I decided to leave the scope on and mount the laser sight below the scope.
So here's the theory. If the scope is shifting and producing the wandering POI, the laser sight should be able to detect the shift.
Assuming the POI shift only originates from one source. Assuming all screws are snug (checked and triple checked). Benching the gun to eliminate some shooter error.
Testing at a magnification of 50X (10-15 yards) ...the budget "laser" dot is too spread out on paper for accurate tracking ...(might need to spend more money for a "real" green laser?). Magnification of 25X shows some promise.
Adjustment screws on the budget "laser" sight is iffy...A drop of thread locker might be in the future. OR more cash to Amazon for a better product.
Don't know if anyone has used a laser sight coupled with a scope to troubleshoot a wander POI before..limited Google search was a negative.
So stay tuned. This saga is not over. Money and time are the only limiting factors.
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