I wasn't using a scope when I did my drift test shooting at 100 and 1000 yards. I used aperture sights with a spirit level on the front one. When installing the sights, a level was placed on the rear sight's elevation slide then the front sight (mounted on a barrel band) was rotated until it's level matched the one on the rear sight. The error between the rear sight being level such that it elevated in the true vertical was no more than 5 MOA.
The spirit level indicated a 20 MOA cant when its bubble was about 1/8th inch off center. All shots were fired with the bubble no more than 1/32 inch off center (about 5 MOA cant). The biggest cant error between the vertical sight axis and the true vertical was therefore no more than about 10 MOA. The horizontal deflection caused by a 12 MOA (2/10ths degree) cant for a 155-gr. bullet's 2 inch drop at 100 yards from a .308 Win. is about .007 inch; at 1000 yards it's about 1.1 inch for its 325-inch drop; elevation was about 5000 feet and muzzle velocity about 3025 fps.
At 100 yards, the 15-shot group was about 3/8ths inch and about 9 inches at 1000 yards. Both were centered horizontally. This is why I think whatever drift from precession there was (is?) didn't make itself visible because it was negligible.
The spirit level indicated a 20 MOA cant when its bubble was about 1/8th inch off center. All shots were fired with the bubble no more than 1/32 inch off center (about 5 MOA cant). The biggest cant error between the vertical sight axis and the true vertical was therefore no more than about 10 MOA. The horizontal deflection caused by a 12 MOA (2/10ths degree) cant for a 155-gr. bullet's 2 inch drop at 100 yards from a .308 Win. is about .007 inch; at 1000 yards it's about 1.1 inch for its 325-inch drop; elevation was about 5000 feet and muzzle velocity about 3025 fps.
At 100 yards, the 15-shot group was about 3/8ths inch and about 9 inches at 1000 yards. Both were centered horizontally. This is why I think whatever drift from precession there was (is?) didn't make itself visible because it was negligible.