• If you are being asked to change your password, and unsure how to do it, follow these instructions. Click here

How often is your scope off after hunt?

coop2564

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 6, 2015
Messages
1,244
Location
Texas
I had two hunts this year 5 day hunts. Lots of hiking, both hunts guns got soaking wet, lots of jarring from 4 wheeler rides and one propped on tree slid off in wind gust and landed on rocky ground. One was wood stock Ruger No.1 and other a fiberglass/graphite stock Bergara. Scopes were both Leopolds. Took both guns to the range the other day and both were off 2" at 100yds, Ruger high. Bergara right, it fell off tree onto turret hard enough to leave light dent in edge of dial. Ruger went thru multiple rains and some rough 4 wheeler rides. Watched a hunting guide on you tube, he actually went on a guided hunt himself and missed a shot at mulie low@455yds after 3 days of rough hunting, 2nd shot was not possible. When he checked rifle it was off 3" low @100yds. Just got me thinking how many times our guns fail us at long range just because the hunt conditions cause a impact shift. Nothing worked lose on either of my guns. After making the 2" correction both are still holding that zero and shooting groups fine. In the case of my Ruger I still got my deer shot was 137yds I did hit high in lungs though. No shot on Bergara hunt. How often after hard hunt have you found your rifle off?
 
As with the others, I have had that problem in the past with Leupolds and Vortex optics. I don't use them anymore. Nightforce, Trijicon, Maven, and Tract are all I use on my hunting rifles now.
I still have a couple of Vortex, but they are on my bench/practice guns.
 
Everything fails, certainly some more than others. I've only had 3 failures afield that weren't explainable, a vortex pst, a vortex red dot, and oddly enough a trijicon rmr. Have had several other sighting systems fail, but all made sense. Heck I've killed several sets of screw on iron sights.
 
Rarely ever, but even when, only a couple of clicks or so. I have a rifle from the early 1970's still wearing its original scope and mounts, and year after year at checking, if it is not still holding zero, it is only a few clicks off. Though, that rifle has been retired a few years now. I have had a couple of scopes break during practice sessions or long bouts of load development.
 
Last edited:
Top