The BFTA "British Field Target association" has an excellent tutorial concerning this subject as well as other valuable techniques. http://www.fekete-moro.hu/bfta-setup-manual/index-en.php#32
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Good discussion, here are the steps I take to optically zero a scope:
- The quick and easy way is to count the clicks from top to bottom then adjust to your mid-point (then you're done and move onto steps 1-5 below)
- Or, you can optically zero it using a small mirror to center your reticle within the housing. If it's not illuminated then you'll have to be near a window so light can reflect off the mirror into the scope.
- Set parallax to infinity
- Set magnification to medium/low
- Place scope flat on mirror
- Visually align the reticle & its reflection (the picture below shows them misaligned)
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- Loosen the adjustable rings (snug but loose enough to move the scope by hand)
- Shoot gun on target at your desired zero distance
- Adjust the rear ring (up) until your pellets start hitting close to your zero distance
- Tighten all ring adjustments
- Finally, adjust your turrets to fine tune your zero
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I’m gonna ask this question to all on this tread to hopefully help others. If my assumption is wrong, let me know. I’m kind of piggy backing on NCED’s very beneficial link on the inner workings of a scope:
Is it safe to ASSUME, if turning turrets during a sight in session, if you see that your elevation corrections are affecting your windage settings(like meaning windage wise you’re already good to go, all you have left is to dial in the correct elevation to hit the bulls eye), that would mean your scope is most likely not optically centered? Of course, this could be vice versa also, where your elevation setting is good to go, and all you have to dial is windage, and in doing so it affects your elevation setting.
I ask this question because for years I struggled with sight in procedures, where every time I dialed one setting it affected the other. I knew nothing about having an optically centered scope. Then recently when I learned about OC my scopes, I notice once my windage was spot on, setting elevation didn’t affect the windage setting anymore.
Another cause of this could be the reticle not on the same axis as the bore.
If you use the mirror method this is what I did. I got a small round mirror, got about 10 for very little, and glued one to a scope cover. Tied a knot to use when scope is off of the gun or use the whole thing when scope is mounted. I use a very bright flashlight and it shows up very well. just my 2 cents worth, if its worth that.
Don
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This is what a benchrest/ machinist friend showed me yrs ago, he took two 90deg. machinists blocks positioned them @ 45deg. so they were in a V then rotated the scope 360deg. Watching trough scope at crosshairs with a white paper background and adjusted turrets until there was no more run out! He did this on his leupold 36x and my Weaver-T36x, seemed to work fine? But yet br. Shooters don’t click or need the wide range of of adjustments as airgun FT Shooters & hunters need!