Pack out the rear mount mate. A couple of layers of electricians tape in the bottom cradle of the rear mount should sort it. Hope that helps
Pack out the rear mount mate. A couple of layers of electricians tape in the bottom cradle of the rear mount should sort it. Hope that helps
Because the scope objective is touching the rifle it's possible that it's physically holding the front of the scope at a raised angle to the barrel which would obviously lift the POA.
Regardless of that you need higher mounts to lift the objective, or a scope with a smaller diameter objective, take it off immediately because the longer it's on the more likely it will damage the blueing where it's rubbing.
youl be lucky you havent buggered your scope due to it touching the action and tightening it up. if i was you just go to your local gun shop and get yourself some higher mounts, you can pack out the front mount but its just one big headache if you dont know what you are doing
Ive just bought medium 1 piece mount off ,see how that goes,i did read some where scope has to be close to gun as possible also read high mounts not what you want,dunno about that low medium high whats dofference aslong as you can zero who cares ?.
It "almost" all comes down to the size of the objective, but it's not the only thing which can foul. I had a 52mm Redfield, went to put it in a medium one piece mount but the part around the turrets (is it called the saddle?) would have been crushed by the mount if I'd tightened it, machined 1mm off the top of the mount to make it fit.
The difference as you are now finding out is that you can't zero if your scope is fouling.
The difference between low mounts & high is that your line of sight will cross the projectile trajectory at slightly more of an angle so there will be fractionally more error if your range finding is out,
but that's utterly irrelevant compared to not being able to zero.
There are no if's, but's or maybe's, if your scope is fouling then it's mounted wrong, you want a good 3-5mm gap between objective & barrel.
Ok lads thanks for the help and advice im sure the mount ive ordered will fit ok.thanks again.
Don't try packing out your existing mounts, it's a bodge at best. You need higher mounts, simple as - and hope you've not already damaged your scope...
Ok lads thanks
Taken off the JSR site …. hope this helps
Medium mounts 1" tube:
•Front Lens Size: Up to 45mm - This figure describes the maximum size of the objective (front) lens the mount is designed for when the dovetails are flush with the barrel. Please bear in mind scopes with front PX adjustment will often need higher mounts.
Low mounts 1" tube
Front Lens Size: Up to 32mm - This figure describes the maximum size of the objective (front) lens the mount is designed for when the dovetails are flush with the barrel. Please bear in mind scopes with front PX adjustment will often need higher mounts.
High Mounts 1" tube
Front Lens Size: Up to 56mm - This figure describes the maximum size of the objective (front) lens the mount is designed for when the dovetails are flush with the barrel. Please bear in mind scopes with front PX adjustment will often need higher mounts.
From experience of two of the main mount makers:
Hawke medium mounts up to 40mm with PA. Although a 44mm with no PA can fit.
Sportsmatch medium mounts up to 44mm with PA. Although a 50mm with no PA can fit.
The mounts aren't something to be skimped on.