Bwgunslinger
AH senior member
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2023
- Messages
- 95
- Reaction score
- 159
Mounted scope. Now just need to sight it in.
Looks good! Are you seeing front sight on 1x?Mounted scope. Now just need to sight it in. View attachment 700618View attachment 700619
Oh of course! Until around 4x. I was expecting that so no problemLooks good! Are you seeing front sight on 1x?
Vortex has the best warranty in the industry-----> and you'll have to use it.I've had two Vortex RDO's fail me and a set of their binos had to be sent back to the factory twice for minor bumps. I wouldn't trust these optics to watch cat videos.
For brands, the entry point is Leupold and Trijicon and goes up from there. For durability I'd choose Schmidt & Bender (S&B) but for the best optics it would be Swaro and Leica.
Mounted scope. Now just need to sight it in. View attachment 700618View attachment 700619
Thank you! Eye relief is great with room to spare. If you need part number of these rings I can sendLooks great! How’s your eye relief? I mocked mine up and I may have to switch to a full rail to move it back enough.
Looks great! How’s your eye relief? I mocked mine up and I may have to switch to a full rail to move it back enough.
Exactly. I learned the "buy once, cry once" lesson the hard way with Vortex. However I did recoup some of the money by selling the binos after I got them back the second time.Vortex has the best warranty in the industry-----> and you'll have to use it.
Those 1-piece Talley rings/bases looked high in the Midway image though listed as 0.4" from bottom to scope tube. So I checked the combined scope/ring heights on my 98 Mauser 404J and Springfield 03A3 for comparison.![]()
Talley Lightweight 2-Piece Scope Mount 30mm Rings Winchester 70
The construction of the Talley Lightweight Mount is unique. The rigid design has no joint between the scope and rifle. The Talley Lightweight unitized...www.midwayusa.com
QD rings also give the option of switching to a different scope if the situation requires it (e.g. switching from plains game to buffalo with the same 375 H&H rifle). Or if changing environmental conditions suddenly dictate iron sights are more suitable (e.g. snow, rain, or rugged terrain). And finally, if I had to ride livestock to get to the hunting, I would be a lot more comfortable throwing my de-scoped rifle in the scabbard and then snapping it back on to start hunting at the end of the trip.Maybe, I am wrong. But, in my opinion the QD mount is a fixture of a bygone era, when rifle scopes were quite fragile and much more prone to damage or failure. I have been hunting and shooting since the mid 60's and using scopes regularly since the mid 80's and never once have I damaged a scope so badly that it was not serviceable. I have used cheap crap like BSA, Simmons, etc, high dollar Euro optiks like Swaro, Zeiss, quality USA optics from Leupold, Redfield, Unertl, Weaver and low budget modern scopes from Arken, Athlon, etc.
Once, I had a benchrest rifle that was shot thousands of rounds during the match season and bouncing around in the truck for months on end. It had the rings work loose on the bases and lost zero. Fixed in five seconds with an allen wrench once I figured out the cause. A couple of times, I have had rifles lose zero due to bouncing around but were never out of action. Never, have I had to remove a scope in the field due to a failure. Plus, how many PH's do not have a rifle they can hand you if your rifle is thrown off the truck and ran over by a bulldozer?
New, quality optics like Swarovski, Kahles, Leupold, Vortex, etc are very tough pieces of equipment. QD mount is more likely to get bumped loose than the scope is likely to fail. Not needed in my opinion. If the QD makes you feel good, then use it but it is not for me. Tank said keep it simple. Good advice. Either LPVO or the Red-Dot will work. Go with the one you like best. Just keep in mind that the rifle shoots the same regardless of the tool used by you to aim it at the target. Some may be more precise and others faster at close range. The 1st shot is the one that counts the most. Make it count.
Whatever, you choose to mount, my only other suggestion is to hunt locally for deer, antelope, coyote, anything locally available with your chosen set up. Use the lighted reticle in bright sun and lowlight as well as deep, dark forest settings to get some real life trigger time on it before you fly many hours and hunt DG with it. That is a great way to suss out any gremlins or weakness in you gear before the big hunt. If you use what works for you, it will be hard to go wrong.
The difference between the two is not significant: barrel band sling swivel (why?) and slightly different rear sight (different base, same fold down leaf). I am surprised the Alaskan has such a long barrel.The rifle I just mounted the scope on is the M70 Alaskan. It might be fun to also get a Safari Express .375 and leave it irons only.
I had the safari express before. Beautiful stock on the one I had. My brother took it on a buffalo hunt before I was able to go then when he got back really wanted it since he killed a buffalo with it.The difference between the two is not significant. I am surprised the Alaskan has such a long barrel.