Nope I'm good in that regard. That sort of thing wouldn't faze me in the slightest
That's a clever idea northdude, normally I can get back a bit from the scope and get the vertical line running down through the centre of the barrel but with the higher comb and particular scope I couldn't do it that way. Conetrols are bastards because you cant rotate the scope in them to straighten it up. They have to be loosened / unclipped from the scope with a tap from a screw driver handle moved a little towards the pencil mark you made earlier clip them and try in the bases again.
Buy it, thrash it, don't touch the lenses out in the field.
If you are worried about it you are either not using it enough or you have spent too much on it.
Just my take on gear
Agreed. With my tyre tube rubber band my scopes are pretty well protected and stay dry. Just opening up any ideas on a bit of extra impact protection as to me it makes sense. On one Leupold scope what I did was buy cheap push on flip ups and cut the silly flip up cover off and just kept the push on base part to protect each end of the scope in combination with the tyre tube.
98% agree. I would just say "enjoy it" rather than "thrash it"...
I can laugh at you simply because I've been there, done that. I purchased a Swaro Z6i and for the first couple of trips I was cradling the rifle like a new-born baby and protecting it like it was the last scope on earth. I got over it eventually. I still take care but I'm now back to the more grounded opinion its just a scope, it is replaceable, its a tool, I paid this much for the functionality it provides so I need to use it and enjoy it.
I never clean the glass in the field. I do have a cap on the objective to keep it clean. I have a scope cover but that comes off as I step out into the field.
So yeah... use it heaps and enjoy it.
I found my ‘grand idea’ of fitting a section of bike inner tube as a hood extending forward of the front lense was good for keeping it dry but had the not-so-good side effect of cutting down the light gathering ability of the front lense by a surprising amount
The similar idea on the rear of the scope worked well - but didn’t stop me being ‘scoped’ above my eye when shooting steeply uphill....
draw a line on the floor in the evening and line up the centerline of the rifle with the line with the recoil pad on the ground
shine a torch in the objective bell and check that they line up
rubber inner tube seems to be working this far make one up while you think about what could be better
ill bet it never gets replaced
@Moa Hunter what scope did you end up getting?
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