Boyd Allen
Active member
How would a scope manufacturer test POI shift? I understand how they might check tracking, but what specific equipment do they have to simulate conditions when scopes are installed and fired?
Back in the day, a friend and I set up a scope rack with several bases on a single plate that was part of an assembly that could be set on a table. Windage adjustable rings were used and a single scope used to align them to a target. All of the available 36X scopes were installed. The spacing was as close as practical. We set the device up at a registered match and invited shooters to look through the scopes, allowing them to make any adjustments that they wanted. This was the best method for comparing subjective evaluation of scope optics that I have heard about. Perhaps it is time for someone to do it again with today's scopes. The scopes were a B&L, two different models of Tasco, a Weaver, and a Leupold. The bases were one piece Weaver, designed for a 336 Marlin (flat topped receiver), and the rings were Millet. I probably should add that I agree that for benchrest, that having a scope not move is paramount. I find that shooters are often distracted from this by differences in image quality.
Back in the day, a friend and I set up a scope rack with several bases on a single plate that was part of an assembly that could be set on a table. Windage adjustable rings were used and a single scope used to align them to a target. All of the available 36X scopes were installed. The spacing was as close as practical. We set the device up at a registered match and invited shooters to look through the scopes, allowing them to make any adjustments that they wanted. This was the best method for comparing subjective evaluation of scope optics that I have heard about. Perhaps it is time for someone to do it again with today's scopes. The scopes were a B&L, two different models of Tasco, a Weaver, and a Leupold. The bases were one piece Weaver, designed for a 336 Marlin (flat topped receiver), and the rings were Millet. I probably should add that I agree that for benchrest, that having a scope not move is paramount. I find that shooters are often distracted from this by differences in image quality.