thirty years ago I had purchased a rem model seven, it shot 1 in groups when new, sent it off to have the barrel action refinished with dull finish, was very shinny bluing. the gunsmith refinished the rings and mount also. put rifle back together and it still shot good for about 2 years deer hunting, less than ten shots total and four deer in the freezer, then every thing went to crap, 3-4 inch groups. glass bed the stock, no changed, it sat in the gun safe for twenty five years. recently I pulled the old classic rifle out of the safe and did a completed relook, come to find that a tally base was loose, I knew right away that was the culprit. lock tight the bases on and the rifle now shoots just under 1 inch groups. life is good again !
@johnnyadams17556 ай бұрын
Right away...25 years later😂
@jayblemsin42266 ай бұрын
Whats a tally base ?
@SammyMoore-tg5gs6 ай бұрын
@@jayblemsin4226 Talley is a company that makes quality scope rings and bases. Highly recommend.
@JDsModernMartialArts6 ай бұрын
@@jayblemsin4226Talley makes scope rings and mounts. 😊
@chasetheoutdoors6 ай бұрын
I couldn’t imagine shooting my rifle less than ten times in over a two year span.
@mattcormier9836 ай бұрын
For hunting, cold bore zero is what matters. Shoot one shot every day and record its position. Compile about 10 and use that as your zero. Light profile barrels shift a lot and with very few shots in my experience.
@timothym22416 ай бұрын
I agree. It’s also valuable to know, whether your cold bore shot is different than the rest. Assume it is, unless you know otherwise.
@GreenFields-77776 ай бұрын
I have a carbon barrel and I would never buy one again. It’s hard to get any kind of really good accuracy grouping unless you’re prepared to sit there all day. And forget about taking a shooting course because the amount of shots you need to take as specified time is infeasible with that type of barrel.
@anthonyhilton41686 ай бұрын
I’ve got a Savage ultralight with a carbon fiber barrel and it’s shooting 1/2” or better (on a 3 shot group). I also have an Eric Cortina tuner brake on it, maybe that’s the difference?
@McgSpook6 ай бұрын
I dont shoot hunting rifles much so Im assuming it may be more of an issue with the thinner barrels and such. On good heave match barrels I dont see cold bore shift. There is clean bore shift of course. Personally, after a good cleaning I will shoot 10 rounds or so to foul it up and leave it alone until accuracy starts to degrade. Rinse, repeat.. There was a time when i thought cold bore shift was happening and what i found out (for me) was that it was actually cold shooter. To test this i took another rifle with me each day and did my first 20 or so shots from that other rifle. Then i shot the rifle i had a recorded cold bore on. Amazingly enough, no shift. That made me realize i needed a lot more work on my body position mechanics. Others may have different experiences.
@McgSpook6 ай бұрын
@@HazardousRob some are better than others for sure.
@patrioticguy17916 ай бұрын
I shoot PRS and when I have a zeroed rifle in Indiana and go to Northern Michigan or Southern Indiana or even 2 hours west in Illinois the following day, I have to re-zero because sometimes it's still off even if your equipment is not loose. Temperature, barometric pressure, density altitude, all kinds of stuff can affect your zero from one day to the next.
@onebadjack13136 ай бұрын
Have you tried the 4dof zero range function? I've been meaning to see if that works. I didn't realize what it was til recently.
@JourdanUrbach6 ай бұрын
What scope are you running?
@onebadjack13136 ай бұрын
@cijetovina You are correct! I had to look at my 4dof. Apparently, my memory sucks.
@hallovelo24786 ай бұрын
@patrioticguy1791 A rifle is never zeroed. Also the change of light will affect your pint of impact. For sure it depends on what your goals are on hitting a target.
@francescobredemeyer60776 ай бұрын
Spot on about temperature, barometric pressure and altitude!!!
@andreasgauckler31526 ай бұрын
One point not mentioned is if you wear glasses. This can impact your parallaxes without realizing. I never realized cold bore issues with my Model 70 or my Blazer. This usually is a thing with extremely thin barrels e.g. Kimber from my experience or can be caused by a barrel with improper stress relief due to incorrect heat treatment which should very very rare. I like the turret stickers.
@briansteele13786 ай бұрын
I totally agree with you in that everyone wants to focus on group size, but none of that matters especially in a hunting rifle if it can't consistently hold zero.
@K2snowXJ5 ай бұрын
you, as well as others in the comments hit the nail on the head, that a cold bore shot is the most important to care about if you’re hunting. I’ll add to that thought. Here in maine, it’s common for guys to go zero a rifle in the middle of august when it’s 90 degrees and humid. they say, “yup we’re good.” throw it in the corner until November. then they get up in a treestand when it’s 15 degrees and dry. even if it was a “cold bore” zero back in august, that’s a 75-80 degree difference even on the first shot, not to mention how much the humidity difference has on a traditional wood frame. a lot of us are familiar with finished wood doors not closing correctly in the summer when it’s hot and humid, but working correctly most other days. combine that with an 80 degree colder barrel on the first shot, you definitely could be off. I tested this theory with my 1968 .270 win model 70. Zeroed it from a rest on a hot humid day. went out the next similar weather day and put 2 rounds through it to simulate cold bore. both shots were within 1 Moa at about 75 yards. 5 more shots, barrel was warm, not a whole ton of change. went up to about 1.5moa which could have been shooter error or temp change. but in those 7 shots across a 10 minute interval, the barrel temp increased only 40 degrees. few months later, picked a 13 degree frosty morning, let the rifle sit in the cold truck all night. first 3 shots, all closely grouped, about 1 moa, but were all off about 3-4” from the point of aim at 75 yards. after 6 shots, the barrel was up to 70-80 degrees and we’re back within an inch of the point of aim. So that resting temp change, a 200 yard first shot on a deer, would have been off 7-10” compared to a 90 degree humid day.
@danroseveare30906 ай бұрын
Everything starts with the shooter. If your shooting form is consistent then you go looking at equipment and other potential issues. We all must pay attention to pressure, humidity, wind, lighting, thermals, etc. At the end of the day the best rule to follow is that if you're not sure of where your shot impact will be, don't take the shot. There's nothing wrong with an ALL STOP if things are wrong. In fact, that's the safest thing to do. Great video. Thanks for all the work you and the crew (family and friends) have done to provide these videos and information for us so we can all learn.
@matthewpenn4076 ай бұрын
Man... thank you. It so easy to forget to tighten everything down. Had my rifle out to the range two weeks ago and it was perfect, went out yesterday and couldn't hit a thing. Just now checked it after watching this, my rear scope mount was loose, bipod was loose, and my suppressor was backed off about 1/8th of a turn!
@jasonshults3686 ай бұрын
I'd hate to see the condition of your car/truck. And the rest of us hage to share the road with you.
@matthewpenn4076 ай бұрын
@@jasonshults368 My tahoe is immaculate. The problem is that I have to drive highway 4 to and from work. Look it up, it's in south Texas. One of the worst highways in the Untied States.
@syednoori37996 ай бұрын
this was the exact problem i had ,missed an ibex about 9,10inches down, at 350 meters, i rechecked everything at last it was the suppressor that was lil bit loose, i thought i cant be the problem so went to the range to check , you know what happened,
@user605211236 ай бұрын
The second point is really fascinating. It’s call the Law of Large numbers in stats. You’ll know when you’ve shot enough rounds to zero when the center of the groups no longer moves a significant distance. Great video!
@phild98136 ай бұрын
I have zero interest in knowing the answer to this question for a big game hunting rifle. The first shot is by far the most important, and maybe up to two after that matters much less. Some rifles wander a lot after getting hot, some don’t.
@blantant6 ай бұрын
@@phild9813this assumes the human doesn't overestimate their skill and has a rock solid platform.
@user605211236 ай бұрын
@@phild9813 Basing your accuracy on one shot will not tell you anything about the accuracy of your first shot. If you need your first shot to be on the money, you should base it on an even larger group. You can do this while allowing your rifle to cool off. It’s about probability not luck.
@johnkissam83126 ай бұрын
Really appreciate your contribution. Smacked my forehead and…..of course. Also remembered that data should not be anally extracted !! Otherwise it’s simply so much B.S.
@jmlorenz6 ай бұрын
I learned a lot from this informative video, thanks Jim. My comments are in regard to the effect of barrel temperature on the POI: 1. there was no discussion of the effect of barrel temperature on barrel harmonics; 2. there can a very broad range of variation in barrel temperature - which will vary with the barrel material, mass, and surface area - e.g. from ambient temperature, which could be 30 degrees F to > 106 degrees F after 8 shots in my rifle; 3. Eagleye Hunting Gear showed quite a bit of difference among rifles in the change in POI with increasing barrel temperature in a KZbin video; 4. It is important to distinguishing between the effect of increasing barrel temperature and fouling with repeated shots. Of course when you're hunting the most important shot is going to be with a cold bore.
@mikevieira63736 ай бұрын
What about scope cant ?….I shoot out at a buddies property, but the ground isn’t always level where we shoot. I’m running Holland levels on all my scoped long guns now. You hit the light conditions point very well. I used to get frustrated sighting in, I’d shoot on a weekend, & get the gun dialled in during mid day. Then I sometimes ran out to the shooting range after work when the sun was going down, and my point of impact would change, not a lot, but enough to frustrate me. I soon started sighting in later in the evenings when the sun wasn’t hitting my scope at different angles and noticed my point of impact was never far off week to week.
@The340king17 күн бұрын
We were attempting to zero a few weeks ago and the rifle was shooting all over. The scope mount had come loose. We tightened it up and immediately shot a sub MOA five shot group. We then went on to shooting steels, or at least the rubber straps where the steels used to be. We were hitting the 3” strap 3/4 of the time at 365 yards. No issues there. Great job of explaining the possible issues. I helped a guy with a rifle that had a short scope on it. They used a cantilevered mount on one end dangling over the action port. Needless to say the 25-06 with its minor recoil was moving the scope around on the diving board. The final thing is ammunition. Different manufacturers bullets will fly differently. This is especially true with bullet weight differences. One rifle shoots 3” groups with 55 grain bullets and sub MOA with 77 grain bullets. It’s amazing how much that changes things.
@JimYeats6 ай бұрын
I think cold bore “shifts” come predominantly from people cleaning their barrel between range sessions or between zero’ing their gun. You scrub that barrel and you will absolutely have POI change for a shot or so. You commonly hear cold bore shift discussions with fairly inexperienced shooters or casual shooters. I don’t ever hear precision shooters have issues with cold bore POI problems.
@raijin52809 күн бұрын
This is why I don't clean the bore of any rifle I have. I don't shoot corrosive ammo so I don't see a point in cleaning it out
@jesseiancassidy6 ай бұрын
The cold bore subject is really a cool one to dive into to. One thing was missed that I have run into. Action screws miss torqued make a huge difference.
@newscoulomb37056 ай бұрын
That must be why California makes it a felony to possess a hearing protection device. They're really looking out for us!
@HookLineSinger6 ай бұрын
Seriously??? 😐
@newscoulomb37056 ай бұрын
@@HookLineSinger Seriously. It's also a felony to possess a "sniper scope," which is any optic with night vision or thermal capabilities. Just think how dangerous it would be if people could correctly identify targets in low-light conditions. California law makers are truly special.
@HookLineSinger6 ай бұрын
@@newscoulomb3705 makes me thankful to be in Alabama!
@Zer0Edits006 ай бұрын
You mean a suppressor? Cuz a hearing protection device could be headphones 💀
@newscoulomb37056 ай бұрын
@@Zer0Edits00 I said what I said. 😉
@johnmorganjr769Ай бұрын
Thank you, friend. Its the nuances that get you, 'devils in the details' stuff. 🙏 💯
@CplSkiUSMC6 ай бұрын
Cold bore is very real. The velocity on that first shot is different than the subsequent shots. You can let the rifle cool completely and shoot again... only to find that even though the bore/barrel is stone cold, there is no shift in impact. Go out the next day or next weekend, and the cold bore shift is back. This leads me to believe that the cold bore phenomenon has more to do with chemical changes in the fouling in the bore. We know that carbon fouling in the bore acts as a lubricant, that's why a clean bore shot has lower velocity due to higher friction, but what is happening to that carbon in relation to copper and other chemical deposits over 24 hours that doesn't happen in 1 or 2 hours? Maybe I'm smoking crack, but you decide whether or not this sounds plausible to you.
@garyhosier47656 ай бұрын
Thinking about cold bore. I’m just an average everyday shooter. I work in a machine shop. I could see a rifle bore changing with temperature. Variables might be material of barrel, thickness of barrel, tempering of barrel, consistency of atmosphere during machining causing a less accurate barrel. Maybe the bore isn’t directly down the center all the way; ie; barrel thickness varies around diameter, the rifling is inconsistent down the barrel. I’m not a gunsmith or anything. Not even a machinist. I just work manufacturing machined parts, some thick some very thin. Some of our parts have 2000 lasered holes .025-.030 diameter. The part changes.
@willemwallaby5 ай бұрын
Umm…. That last one you demonstrated is parallax, and it’s why we have adjustable objectives. The higher the magnification, or the lower the f ratio on the main objective, the more pronounced the effect. Scopes that lack an adjustable objective usually have the parallax set to 100 yards.
@beenstork6 ай бұрын
2:00 Last time at the range, I had this exact thing happen. I was shooting a new barrel and getting decent groups. Then I started noticing my point of impact shift. At first I thought it was just the barrel settling in. Then I was letting the barrel and suppressor cool down between shot strings. I reached up to feel how hot the suppressor was and noticed a tiny bit of play. I re tightened it (maybe a 1/10 of a turn) and then magically my original POI came back to the original spot. I learn this lesson first hand that day. Now I check the suppressor for snugness often
@jonathanrogers99616 ай бұрын
Hornady podcast #50 on group size is very interesting. Basically, you should shoot a 10-20 round group and use the center of the group as the center of your zero. and that group should be what you consider your rifle actually capable of.
@jasonshults3686 ай бұрын
10-20 shots? Maybe for Fudds. I use a 750 shot zero.
@CutlassOutdoors6 ай бұрын
Incredible. Very well done video that covers a lot of common reasons for losing zero. I learned something new. Thanks!
@arcli9ht6 ай бұрын
This might sound stupid but aging of the fouling in the bore can do it too. Even if that fouling is just the oil after cleaning. The carbon absorbs water, the copper oxidizes, the oil evaporates.
@josehorta45816 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing all your wisdom I as a new hunter I like to learn from people like you who have experience and you explain well thank you I didn’t know there was a difference being a little lost that’s why it didn’t hit them
@PrecisionRifleNetwork6 ай бұрын
solid informational video as usual! Ordered some turret tags - what a great idea...that I wish I would have thought of. LOL
@Iceaxehikes6 ай бұрын
I free floated the barrel of my Ruger m77 and bedded the action in the stock because it was shooting wild. Tried all kinds of different torque on the stock screws to no avail. Finally realized it was just a piece of wood and sanded the forend away from the barrel and bedded the action. It really helped the rifle a lot. The variability from shooting from a bipod vs resting on a bag is much less than it was. Will find out next month if i drew an elk tag this year or not. Deer tag for sure.
@Gunrunner2236 ай бұрын
Ive done the same with my 1995 model, Ruger m77 mark II 270. Even with handloads, about 2" inch was as good as it would do. Bedded the stock, floated the barrel, lightened the trigger to 2.2 lbs, played with different torques on the stock screws, and only got it down to 1.25" inch. My theory is, before the Ruger American, savage axis type budget rifles, that shoot deadly accurate, most rifle manufacturers didn't put a lot into accuracy. And rightfully so. Us hunters didn't either. I knew a lot of guys that 3 shots hitting a pie plate at 100, was good to go! Now that budget guns shoot 1/2 moa out the box, those higher end guns have to shoot well also. I've got a new savage 110 timberline in 243win, that with handloads shoots 3/8" all day. And a Heinz 57 AR-15 with a larue tactical 20" barrel in 223 whylde, that shoots better than any bolt gun I've ever even seen shot ! Cold bore will be 3/8" from the next 5, that are all in one hole. Like a 0.2 group. Times are good for accurate rifles.
@brandonbelchersr94966 ай бұрын
@@Gunrunner223Have a question if ya don’t mind, So I’m wanting to put a 223 wylde barrel on mine as well, just curious, Did you keep same bolt carrier? Or did you match the barrel with a new bolt? and did you change out your buffer spring, and use a certain weight? Thanks for any info.
@Gunrunner2236 ай бұрын
@@brandonbelchersr9496 you don't have to change anything. A 223 Wylde, 5.56, or 223 rem, are the same bolt face. I swapped alot of stuff, but to function, the barrel is all you have to change. I highly recommend larue tactical barrels. They have amazing reviews. And I've never seen accuracy like I'm getting. Even bulk brass fmj shoots 1.5 inch groups. Quality factory ammo, shoots 3/4 or better. Every handloads I've tried, from 50gr vmax, 52 eldm, 55 vmax, 55 blitz king, 62 sierra HP, 69 sierra match king, have all shot under 1/2" inch, and most shot 3/8" or better. Never seen anything like it. I did swap my trigger out to a timney $99 single stage 3 lb . My barrel is floated. Hope you find one you like.
@brandonbelchersr94966 ай бұрын
@@Gunrunner223 thanks a lot, very well rundown. At least I know now I’m good on everything but my barrel, which will be a larue barrel.👌🏼 Thanks again and have good one..
@Gunrunner2236 ай бұрын
@@brandonbelchersr9496 absolutely.
@dagrazytcom54926 ай бұрын
Oof, I have a Leupold scope so to see him smack it around I was for certain that scope was messed up. Nope, 'it returns perfectly to zero'. Thankyou for that. Seriously, I've been so worried my scope was going to be off if i jumbled it around in the hunting rig going to the hotspot. I needed that verification.
@smoakngun6 ай бұрын
Very good information. I really enjoy your videos and your honest, unbiased opinion on equipment. I agree with you about the "Cold Bore Shift" phenomenon.
@TheWeirdedBeardo6 ай бұрын
Bro at 12:22 in the Video you can see Jesus over your shoulder. I love that Christus statue. That warms my heart. ❤🤍💙
@ghostfame57196 ай бұрын
Hahaha lost it when you started hammering that scope
@clintonlayne92536 ай бұрын
My thoughts were I wonder if Leopold warranty will cover it. 😂
@wesmatthew78606 ай бұрын
I have had this problem on one rifle ( light barrel) where the first shot on a clean cold bore the shot is way off. Then it comes reasonable in grouping with subsequent shots. I put this down as the first shot is on a barrel with no lubrication from the powder. The burnt powder does provide lubrication. Barrel walking is also a problem with light barrels.
@bryanduchane23716 ай бұрын
Also. Lifting your head off the rifle and changing your cheek weld will cause accuracy issues. If your action and magazines are working properly, there is no reason to lift your head. Watch competitive shooters, they only lift their head when changing targets and distances.
@RealSB6 ай бұрын
Every time he shot it was the first shot...
@Gunrunner2236 ай бұрын
Absolutely. Especially if your scope is a fix parallax scope, and your shooting a distance that's different from the factory setting. Most deer rifle fix parallax scopes are set at 100yds. But some shotgun, muzzleloader, or rim fire scopes may be 50, 60, 75 yards set. They all work ok for most deer hunting ranges in the southeast, but my paper punching, or coyote guns, all get adjustable parallax scopes.
@RealSB6 ай бұрын
@@Gunrunner223 I've had friends that could put their face and eye in the same exact place every time, I'm not that guy.
@Gunrunner2236 ай бұрын
@@RealSB me neither
@stevelinville36816 ай бұрын
Great video, I may have missed it but I didn't see anything on a fouled barrel vs clean bore, this can cause the first shot fliers.
@Timberdam6 ай бұрын
Very informative Jim ! Thank You .. Just read ottokite post and reminded me of a drifting zero on a GA Precision 300 WSM and couldn't figure the culprit until I took the scope off and one of my Premium rings had a hairline stress crack .. Called the company and he told me they had some metallurgy issues with a batch of rings and I returned the ring to them and they sent me a new one ... Back in business ... Hasn't moved again...
@scottlaplante36756 ай бұрын
I agree with everything you said , however your zero is only great if when you shoot after zeroing the external variables / day time conditions are identical from whe you zeroed the rifle . I always zero then go hunting . Bullet impact is different even with season or temperature change .
@NightSniper646 ай бұрын
Hey Jim, After reading several of the comments. There is another possibility that no one is saying. It's rarely thought of yet it happens. The ammunition. If you are shooting factory ammo a change in boxes different lot #s. Lets face it factory ammo is less dependable. Hand loads are usually more accurate and consistent. With that being said you can have a box of bullets for loading and change lot#s and their can be differences, just like powder and primers. I've run into this several times over the many years of handloading. There is no such thing as the perfect zero. The best we can do is the best we can do. Especially when there are so many things that are against shooters, some in our control and some not.
@scottmayberry39063 ай бұрын
Love the Video............ Try this; most do this all the time and is bad habit. Every time you take your eye's off the scope when you shoot, use lose sight picture. Try not leaving the scope, keep sight picture, and cycle the rounds. Sounds simple, but practice is mandatory and break those habits of wanting to look and watch your cycling. If you lose your sight pic and have to re-aim, you have the open groups. watch your video, and you will see what I mean. This does not give the rifle justice in the zero and shot groups. Try this , and see what ya think. Salute
@RobProbst6 ай бұрын
People may be confusing clean bore vs cold bore. I have had many different rifles and especially mussel loaders that shoot horrible when they are clean. So maybe what some would consider a fouling shot is being blamed on cold bore
@charltonlwalker3 ай бұрын
Jim’s videos amplify the correlation between more recoil/less precision. Light kickers are much easier to shoot with repeatable precision.
@PoliticallyInsensitive6 ай бұрын
5:32; there's a huge difference between "not tiny little groups", and having a target that looks like you were using a shotgun
@MrJAvB6 ай бұрын
Jim, great video. One thing that I would love to see addressed is the condition of the bore during the cold bore shot. I would love to see your advice on storing a gun (clean barrel, dirty barrel, or an oiled barrel and pushing a few clean patches through.. etc). This might be an explanation to why the shots after the first shot seem to be more consistent (oil is gone and barrel is fouled). Competition shooters could just foul the barrel with a few shots before competing, but for hunters this often is not an option and certainly it isn't ideal. Would be an interesting topic to address, and maybe combine it with a barrel cleaning video (should you clean a bore to bare metal, should you keep it consistently 'fouled-clean' or maybe shoot x amount of shots and then clean and foul the barrel and never touch the barrel until accuracy drops off again). Lots of things to think about :)
@jason2009126 ай бұрын
Mostly clean but don't clean it so hard with ammonia that it reveals eliminates the copper filling up those pores
@Eburns776 ай бұрын
That’s also what I’ve heard with regard to not cleaning out the copper fouling. What I’ve heard reported is the muzzle velocities will actually go up a little bit with the initial deposition of copper. Worth noting on Jim’s last point with shooter position is the angle of the gun with respect to vertical, which if not eliminated will throw your shots around a bit.
@pickardjw6 ай бұрын
Easy solution: don't clean your barrel...ever
@randallreiners37036 ай бұрын
Plus shooter error !
@chrisgunsandguitars14036 ай бұрын
My thoughts are if a hunting rifle only, clean the bore every 20-40 shots. This could take a few seasons; so a patch of light RemOil down the bore after hunting and put her away. Remove the stock if it got wet and address that issue. Rifle should be gone over just like you would a vehicle before a long trip. Check that everything is tight. Then hit the range and check zero. Then don’t clean it until again 20-40 shots. Many rifles can be a little different. Most rifles shoot a little better once a bit fouled. However, your rifle will be cold when you shoot at your deer/elk, so knowing how your rifle shoots cold and fouled is a good thing.
@deedraper97966 ай бұрын
Very comprehensive testing with outstanding information I have found that the most accurate hunting zero possible is to shoot cold bore groups to establish an average zero Right on good stuff mate
@buzzblitzer7506 ай бұрын
Hello from Canada! Could you do a video on SCOPE RINGS alone? I find quite a difference between various rings, some close nicely around the circumference of the scope, while others have a slight gap even though they have been tightened to the recommended torque. I wonder when we get a large temperature shift, if the scope could then move under recoil. I shoot a custom 375 H&H magnum as it has been my favourite cartridge for 40 years. Between the several sets of rings I have, the ones that do end up with a slight gap always seem to be the least consisted and I’m not really sure why. The last time I used such rings was three years ago. The rifle had been zeroed with a new Whitworth barrel installed into the Mauser action ( also new). I took it hunting that fall ( within two weeks of zero) and also took a few test shots after the fly-in. Second day of moose hunting, a hot fall day and an easy 300 yard shot presented with no crosswind at all. I took the shot using a rest, and while it was still a decent hit, it was a fair bit forward and high. Later after recovering the animal, I shot another 200 yd group at the camp after the hunt only to find my zero had shifted three inches left and two inches high. After returning home, I changed out the rings and have not had the same isssue since. I knew it wasn’t the optic, I knew it wasn’t me, as I’ve put thousands of rounds of .375 down range over the decades and I’m very comfortable with the recoil of the rifle which fits me very well. I’d love to hear your opinion on rings, how you set them up, and your experiences. Cheers.
@peterdmatthews74276 ай бұрын
Check mounts and trigger pressure too high, pulling some shots. I zeroed my Savage model 12 with custom heavy barrel and many mods to 1/2 inch five group, then drove 3 hours to a deer hunt. The mounts (rings) fitted by the gunsmith moved by the time we got there. When i got home, i found he had not bedded the pic rail and didn't torque the mounts. I use a case too! Cold bore is bullshit. I've been an f class shooter for years and its best warm with heavy barrel. Cold bore only affects thin barrels. Biggest issue people forget is custom trigger, trigger weight (1.11-1.15) and plenty of dry fire practice.
@kennethmyers6136 ай бұрын
I've experienced a POI change between the first shot and subsequent shots and was able to correct this shift by remounting the scope or bedding the stock. I've not seen where this shift cannot be corrected. There is a real and measurable difference in velocity, not POI at 100 yards, between the first clean bore shot and subsequent dirty bore shots with some rifles.
@Duckhunterbow6 ай бұрын
Not sure if it applies to centerfire but if i remember right there was a couple people that proved the "cold bore" shift in 22lr was moisture related. They could do a breath of air through a straw into the chamber and down the barrel and the shift was gone. I think Josh on pursuit of accuracy had a video on it. I think some of the center fire shift is cold shooter and positioning of youre face and eye behind the scope
@davidmulligan70673 ай бұрын
Something I might have found on cold bore shift. One thing I do is take out the bolt and let the stock face the wind to take out the smoke before it cools down. With the bolt closed it can create a fine layer of carbon from the smoke coming back from the suppressor which might cause cold bore shift. It would be good if you could test it that way. Will look forward to seeing if it works. Greetings from Ireland Dave.
@davidallen31396 ай бұрын
I’ve got levels on all my rifles, not having a level will probably be the main reason groups change place, it also explains horizontal stringing (other than wind). Try getting your gun set up horizontally and vertically when the landscape slopes, you have no chance because it’s impossible to see your cant. Cold bore shots in my experience tend to be shooter error, dry fire your rifle 2 or 3 times before the shot you will see your error and see it improve from shot to shot without the recoil of a live round.
@joshmorales9036 ай бұрын
Great content as always. I do have a comment on the cold bore discussion. My favorite hunting rifle shoots the cold bore shot 3/4in high and 1/4in right every time. I have shot 1/2moa 5 shot groups by cooling the rifle in-between shots with a barrel fan. Once the rifle is warmed up the group stays tight until round 15ish and then things open up again. I always sight my hunting rifle to "cold bore" zero...... I think it comes back to every rifle having its own little nuances and the only way to be prepared is to put rounds down range. Practice makes perfect!
@jeffboldt41686 ай бұрын
I'm a mechanical engineer, so I overanalyze physics. When I watch shooting videos, it's obvious that the shoulder contact to the stock is below the center of the barrel, so there must be a tendancy to lift the end of the barrel. If I designed a rifle, I'd raise the stock, and therefore the scope so the recoil doesn't affect the aim. That would also put the scope closer to following the bullet drop (assuming you added a tiny shim under the bottom ring). I think when I was a kid (Leopold? Redfield?) made a scope mount that would let you look below the scope to use the iron sights for close shots. Might even allow adding a mini-Red Dot under the scope. Thoughts?
@ericc33276 ай бұрын
Cold bore shift is very real, especially for rifles that aren’t free floated. Thermal expansion in the barrel changes contact with the stock, changing the point as the forces of a bullet traveling interact in new and novel ways. Now you could say “just use only rifles that are floated”, which is fair I guess. But that is a limitation in picking the tool you want for the job. Knowing your rifle, and how it reacts, is important. I’ve had rifles I’ve sold for this reason, because their use case meant that multiple shots would require a warm barrel. I’ve had others I’ve kept, because they would never be shot very warm.
@mrs.vasquezz6 ай бұрын
No
@McgSpook6 ай бұрын
im not so sure. i can definitely see saying once its HOT that it has shifted. But from cold to say shot 4 or 5 it hasnt had time to expand or shift. Maybe the bigger issue, as you pointed out, is not being free floated. Putting variable pressure on the barrel is gonna make it do all kinds of weird stuff. No way to actually tell if the zero is shifting due to temperature or just the stock being flexed.
@ericc33276 ай бұрын
@@McgSpook all depends on the rifle and cartridge how much it shifts and how quickly. But I’ve seen it happen, one rifle would consistently shoot about 4” lower after 3ish shots. And return to zero after cooling down. And if you waited 5 minutes between shots wouldn’t experience PoI shift. I could have tried bedding it for more consistent pressure, or relieving some high spots to get the contact more even, but just sold the rifle.
@McgSpook6 ай бұрын
@@ericc3327 im sure it exist in reality to some extent. but i think people that see large shift, enough to set your zero to a different spot, have something else going on and it its not thermal related. but thats just my thinking. im as crazy as everyone else lol.
@cypherthepro6 ай бұрын
Hey Jim, When culling deer, after 2-3 shots we check the mod. Although, it happens you drop 4-8 in one salvo but try to not rush and if possible to keep in mind the heat is building and mod could shift. I am lucky in that my mod never moves when culling.
@williamgaines97846 ай бұрын
You must use a heat shield/cover on your moderator, or you might regret grabbing it after 4-8 rapid shots.😮🔥
@cypherthepro6 ай бұрын
@@williamgaines9784 it's just wrapped in nice camo tape. It really doesn't happen often. The spigot mods seem worse for it
@coolkidmandude16 ай бұрын
Regarding cold bore shots, I have a hypothesis in its infancy that I really want to test more. I picked up a garmin chronograph and decided to just chrono everything my buddies and I shoot, along with some other guns we get to use through our job (Bergara b14 and hmr in 6.5 cm, seekins hit 6.5 cm, dmr 556, and sp10 in 308, Marlin trapper 45-70, Christensen ranger 22 lr so far). I noticed the velocity of the first recorded shot was generally one of the closest to the average over 10-20 shots. I want to test this much more before I put any stock into this but perhaps taking a lot of time between shots to allow the rifle to cool would improve zeroing. This would mainly apply to hunting scenarios where having the best zero cold bore is essential, but also developing a dope chart closest to that cold bore shot’s velocity and average velocity would be extremely helpful. But in reality, most people don’t shoot well enough for it to matter, whether it’s abilty to adjust for elevation/wind, ability to create and use a stable position, rifle/optic quality and gear setup, or what I just like to chalk up to fudd lore.
@leyderness35536 ай бұрын
What we were taught through training at the S.O's office, is after cleaning the bore of the rifle run a patch through it with a little amount of oil, then run a dry patch through it. That little amount that is left almost mimics the first shot that "dirties the bore. The "cold bore" shot drastically changes the amount of shift.
@McgSpook6 ай бұрын
I'm not sure i would trust that. No way for oil in the barrel to evenly dispersed or take the place of copper. Even after a good cleaning my last step is alcohol patches to remove every bit of solvent and cleaner that may have been left behind. Even a foul bore is still shifting until its gets enough rounds down it to lay in some copper. I wont trust it to stay stable until at least 5-10 rounds. Personally believe what most people think of as cold bore is kinda what you are explaining. The temperature of the bore means very little, the condition of the rifling means a lot. A "cold" bore that is fouled should not drastically change anything. ymmv
@yo2stix6 ай бұрын
Yup gotta take a 20 shot group. Glad to see that on the channel now. Hornady has a podcast called your gs are to small. Very few scopes hold zero. Nightforce is one of the few. Had issues with Vortex and Leupold. Read the drop evaluations on Rokslide. Rings that direct mount to the receiver is best. Tikka with um rings and a nightforce NXS is a really good value. There’s a cold bore test on Rokslide. Cold bore was part of the cone of accuracy. They ran a text of 20 quick shots vs 20 over days. The heated up barrel only changed from 1.25 to 1.4. 10% increase in group.
@jasonshults3686 ай бұрын
The best wau to know the zero of a rifle is the zero that extends through the life of the barrel. If you haven't worn the barrel out attempting to sight it in, your rifle still isn't zeroed.
@dakotahowe52506 ай бұрын
Curious what model Leopold you've had issues with? We have a lot of them in the family and they've all been solid. Have had issues with Vortex though.
@yo2stix6 ай бұрын
@@dakotahowe5250 VX3 and VX5. Sold them all.
@dakotahowe52506 ай бұрын
@@yo2stix crazy how experiences differ on products. I added it up and we have 50 Leupold in the family. Mostly VX3, quite a few Freedoms and a couple VX6. Never had an issue with any of them. I’ve thought I had a scope issue a couple times, but the rings have always been the problem.
@yo2stix6 ай бұрын
@@dakotahowe5250 I had 3 Leopold, 2 failed. Broken erector on the VX5 (and I loved that scope) and a wandering zero on the VX3. I am in the West and gear takes a beating. I hit the range 3-4 times a year and I didn't have the consistency that I now have with my Nightforces. If you go and take a 10, 15, 20 shot group, come back a year later and do the same...see if you zero changed. Often scopes are failing and owners don't realize it as it's not being tested.
@stevenwilkinson83733 ай бұрын
Great video I always learn stuff when I watch your content RE: loose suppressor I had that happen with a new XPR I was zeroing. Thought I had a great start at 50yds moved back to 100 and it was off the page. Frustrated I gave up because of time. As I was putting the gun up I saw the suppressor was loose. Next trip I started at 100 and it was zeroed. GREAT SUCCESS!!
@TTT-du6oj6 ай бұрын
As a hunter what i really want to know is where that first shot goes,when your satisfied you have your gun zeroed where you want it,shoot again on different days and different temps and conditions(cloudy,sunny,even rainy)if possible to make sure that first shot lands where you want it.I like letting my gun sit outside before i shoot and let it get close to outside temperature.A lot of modern powders are not very temperature sensitive but i want to know I’ve made every effort when the moment of truth presents itself.Great discussion👍
@benjaminwilley35786 ай бұрын
Enjoying the content of your videos from over the pond in the Uk.👍
@MrMagoo3216 ай бұрын
Its common knowledge that pencil barrels are less accurate and shift after heating up. Heavy barrels are more accurate and have little to no shift after heating up. Three shot group adjust the scope then check and adjust another Day. Patience is a virtue
@JimYeats6 ай бұрын
All things being equal, sure, a pencil barrel will have a higher chance of being less accurate (or precise) than a heavy barrel, but not inherently so. Same with heat, a pencil barrel will have a larger chance of heat opening up the group, but a high quality barrel that is properly stress relieved shouldn’t have a POI shift. So yeah, in common practice you’re correct, but a lot has to do with barrel quality.
@MrMagoo3216 ай бұрын
@@JimYeats this company says their Sporter barrels are expected to produce 1.5" three shot groups at 100 yds. I'm getting 1" cold bore and about 2.5" warm. So as a cold bore it is good enough for me but since it opens up so much when it heats up then it's no good for target only hunting. Makes sense!
@Leonarco3336 ай бұрын
Traditional pencil barrels are absolutely notorious for shifting zero. I have a stress relieved pencil barrel from criterion that doesn’t. When it gets warm, the group sizes open, but the center doesn’t move. It doesn’t take very many rounds for that to happen either.
@lycheeznuts6 ай бұрын
Pencils barrels are fine if you have a good barrel like a tikka. Most just aren’t sighting in with a large enough sample size and getting their guns true cone of fire for a true zero. Stop shooting 3 shot groups!
@oncall216 ай бұрын
Great topic. One thing I have always done is have my action bedded and barrel floated and triggers set to the same weight.
@pablopenasco42546 ай бұрын
I remember Johnny’s Reloading bench had a little fan gadget that you put into the chamber and blow air down the bore to speed up cooling the barrel back to “cold” bore status. That helped him speed up the process when trying to fine tune his hand loads.
@cwness45876 ай бұрын
Some good stuff again. Now I have check my guns again. Just when I thought I had all my guns dialed in. Good job Jim makes very good sense. CW
@brendavanorden95506 ай бұрын
Your brave. Baffle strikes occur when your suppressor is loose.
@ryanbudney3356Ай бұрын
I had been away from guns and hunting for about 20 years. It's amazing how much you can forget in 20 years. First time out zeroing my deer rifle I failed to notice my scope rings were a tad loose. So the scope slowly shifted in the rings through the session. Didn't figure out why I couldn't maintain zero until I got home from the range.
@cowelk6 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Around the 15:51 time frame you talked about positioning where someone shoots a tight group and gets up and checks the target. Then shoots another tight group but it is not in the same place ( precision but not accuracy). The group has shifted. You speculated that the person is not in the same shooting position on the 2nd group. What if .... it is the sun position? I was a Professional Surveyor who was trained by the Army at Fort Sill in star shots and sun shots for determining the position of the object being aimed at . When we took sun shots we followed the sun in the scope by turning both knobs and noted the exact time ... exact to the second. When I looked through the scope the sun was moving rapidly. I had to make adjustments so that I had the center of the sun in the cross hairs by constantly turning the two turrets and when I got the sun in the exact center I called out to my partner and he noted the exact time. When someone gets up to check the target and gets in position to make a second group he is not seconds away from the shots he made on the first group. He is minutes. The sun has moved a lot in those few minutes. You talked about the position of the sun affecting the scope. I knew about parallax but never thought about the position of the sun rays hitting the scope and the shot placement being a click off in the opposite direction. You opened my eyes. I am going to check it out.
@g1mpster5 ай бұрын
Cold bore is a thing, with improperly bedded rifles, but more often is the symptom of barrel fouling. This is why I always maintain my rifles in a range of copper fouling since that will be closer to the normal state in real-world usage.
@brutushusse6 ай бұрын
Ambient temperature and powder temp tend to cause a shift in both velocity and point of impact.
@waynebrown25466 ай бұрын
A quick trick a friend of mine told me was to use nail polish around the screw heads. every time I take the gun out, I now look at the rings and the pic mounts for the nail polish to be intact, if something moves, the polish will be cracked.
@Nomorehandlenames92306 ай бұрын
I use clear nail polish to lock my screws down instead of locktite. This is a good idea though.
@bigsense78665 ай бұрын
They are called witness marks, we did it to everything in the ARMY that could move, and affect function.
@justbaggit706 ай бұрын
For me on a hunting rifle i want to see what first 3 cold bore shots do. Let cool for awhile and repeat. If getting a chance to take a shot on game need to know where cold bore consistently hits and possibly a follow up shot if needed.
@tikkamarksman6 ай бұрын
A scope don't go backwards in the scope ring under recoil 💡 If it's creeping, it creeps forward >> But you are totally right it's a bad thing to mount the scope in that manner from the beginning 🤝 Greetings from Sweden 🫡
@williamgaines97846 ай бұрын
A lot of people don't believe it, but it is physics. Each component moves in succession. If the scope rings are loose, or the base is loose, the rifle moves, then the scope has to catch up. The scope is not going forward as much as the rifle moves backward from under it - similar to the tablecloth yanking from under the dishes.
@tonycanniffe23606 ай бұрын
Tack så mycket!🇦🇺
@MrMagoo3216 ай бұрын
@backfire Jim, Great channel!! Great advice!!! My gun strings hard after the third shot so that's where's its zeroed. Its a pencil barrel so you have to wait what seems like all day for it to cool all the way. Ive been going through this gun as it had issues which you stated in this video which were affecting the zero along with my shooting it hot. I'll double check three cold shots next time i shoot it as its a hunting rifle and i doubt i will get more than two or even three shots at anything.
@t3h8ar0n6 ай бұрын
I remember reading a long time ago that you could eliminate "cold bore" shift by breathing into the barrel before the initial shot. If I recall it has to do with the level of moisture in the barrel. I have tried it with my rifle, and it worked for me. Get a straw, and shoot a puff of air or 2 down the barrel prior to first shot and see what happens compared to when you dont.
@royguidry13116 ай бұрын
It’s mostly shooter input that makes groups open or zeros to appear to wander on a great rifle. Also atmospheric pressure, wind, temperature and humidity will affect the zero. Ammo is also not perfect. It is impossible for a human to put the exact amount of pressure on the cheek weld, same pressure on your shoulder, or your grip, much less trigger pressure. You can have a 1 lb trigger and crack it at 1 lb or 4 lbs. Then as he said your eye can be a touch off of center up, down, left or right. Most people don’t shoot nearly enough of conscientious practice to be remotely good enough to wring out a great rifle’s accuracy.
@paulx27776 ай бұрын
I wonder if what people call cold bore is not because the bore is cold, but because the bore is well lubricated and clean? I have often fouled the bore with one shot before going out hunting, just to eliminate this factor. But then I always worried about getting a rusty bore by the end of the season! Do people even understand how to find the group center? That is, taking the average location of all the shots in the x direction, and taking the average location of all the shots in the y direction? Do people use a level when mounting their targets on the target backer, AND use a level on their gun, just to ensure the elevation turret does not make any windage changes, and the windage turret does not make any elevation changes? Zeroing on flat land (low altitude) and then hunting on a mountain will do some pretty significant shifts. Basically every factor you can enter in a ballistics program, can affect the zero. And what about the temperature of your ammunition? I used a spreadsheet to make a ballistics program using Art Pejsa's equations. I used two columns, the first being the environment where I zeroed the rifle, and the second being the environment where I was hunting. It's handy to know how your zero is going to change when you go up a mountain or the barometric pressure changes. I even threw in the Coriolis effect although it is too small an effect to get excited about.
@SuperBman12216 ай бұрын
I always wonder as a white tail hunter isn't the first cold bore shot the most important as usually the first shot after hitting your stand is the most important
@hulsey16676 ай бұрын
I think cold bore shift could be to do with shooter position and cheek weld/grip before experiencing the first recoil, namely canting the rifle slightly. After the first shot beds it into the shoulder pocket etc maybe we level the rifle slightly better? Other than that you can fall down the rabbit hole and drive yourself insane wondering whether the rifling imparts more or less spin when cold if its a left-right discrepancy when cold or velocity differences with a cold bore if its a vertical discrepancy.
@rodmcisaac36 ай бұрын
May I suggest locating your rifle in the hard case with the scope closest to the handle. The rifle will then take the weight as you carry it and when you set it down.
@rossholmes1786 ай бұрын
Greetings from Australia...thanks for your work on these vids, always helpful.
@jeffward82786 ай бұрын
In my opinion, using a hard case, people usually put the gun in upside down. When they pick the case up by the handle, the gun is carried upside down. The weight of the gun is weighing down on the scope. I dont know if that could change impact or not.
@troywesterbur7064 ай бұрын
I had an issue one time with altitude change. I was zeroed at 6000’ and traveled for a hunt and was at 2600. I normally hunt above 9000. So my scope wasn’t off a little it was way off. After that I learned that if you travel for a hunt you have to hit the range when you get there.
@PBG7626 ай бұрын
Shoter position is crucial in point of impact. In 100-200yds hunting situation is irelevant. BUT on long range or high stakes.....like Olympic shooting is HUGE..... alot of drills and exercises are focusing on repeatability of postion
@upnorthreloading22146 ай бұрын
I have found that, usually, what people call cold bore shots end up being *clean bore* shots. There is some aspect of their cleaning regimen (and, either alternatively or additionally, the barrel is sensitive to fouling) that makes the first, or first couple shots, different from the rest. After that, I would say that it's something you already touched on - the person's rest settling in, and it's affecting the shooting system (rifle and shooter) as a whole. From there, the onus goes more and more on the shooter, to all the other various points you talked about: parallax, the shooter settling in, etcetera. Another thing I'll toss in, although this isn't strictly cold bore related, I've seen instances where people who take too long to shoot experience point of impact shifts --- after firing several rounds, they leave the round to 'cook' inside the chamber, which can affect the combustion of the components and effect ballistics. I mention this not only because it's POI related, but also it touches on another subject you mentioned: environments. Beyond those broad elements of weather conditions and shooter/system error, it takes... something special for cold bore shots to be an actual, legit thing. We're in the day and age where manufacturing, design, and quality are pretty darn good, and you basically need *something wrong* to have cold bore shots. Thanks for doing this video.
@OnRappel26 күн бұрын
As a rifle instructor for over 20 years I can tell you that chasing a perfect zero is a futile exercise. So many atmospheric conditions come into play that you don't even realize when shooting a rifle. I can't tell you how many times I have a zeroed a rifle one day, confirmed zero the next day and found it a just a click or two off so I readjusted, only to confirmed my zero the third day and my POI had shifted back a click or two. You can't possibly account for every variable. You just need to get it as close as you can and just leave it alone.
@elkhuntr28166 ай бұрын
Very good points. Most reviews I see on youtube where guys shoot good groups, the groups shift point of aim between groups. No one seems to be paying attention to that. Shooting a tight group is meaningless if point of aim shifts 1" between groups. Instead of having a 1 MOA gun, you really have a 2 MOA gun.
@albertlemont54716 ай бұрын
Most of those are load development though you expect it in that situation.
@elkhuntr28166 ай бұрын
@@albertlemont5471 I'm not talking about load development. I'm talking about gun reviews where they test the rifle for precision including this channel. The other think is reviewers never shoot enough groups to really get enough statistical data to really determine what a rifle is capable of. I also hate it when they throw out fliers and say, "well I must have pulled that one". The data on fliers (and point of aim shift) is the most important data of all to determine extreme spread. I'll bet even guns people claim to shoot 0.5 MOA are actually more like 1.5 MOA after 10 3 shot groups.
@ajinvista6 ай бұрын
I would say ammo if you're using ANY factory ammo. The light thing I definitely agree with, experienced it myself. Cold bore for me depended on how I cleaned my barrel. My cold bore shots are spot on now. BTW, I'm shooting a gas gun in 600yd F-TR and do pretty well with it.
@Favorites24996 ай бұрын
What about cold bore science and zero? Should you clean your rifle before you hunt? should you clean it really well and shot 5 shoots through it and then go hunting?
@Lucas12v6 ай бұрын
Been shooting a long time and I'm fairly good at it but I've never heard of the light angle affecting zero. I still don't understand it but it's very interesting. As for cold bore shots, I've neve noticed any significant effects. As in the effect is small enough that Its not clearly identifiable. Clean bore, I've noticed but even that has been less than many people claim.
@txmarine75576 ай бұрын
Your group sizes will likely tighten up or spread out with inconsistent suppressor tightness. Just like using a barrel tuner.
@jamesmooney53486 ай бұрын
Jim, you definitely get a 👍. Good video.
@darrelbeach65856 ай бұрын
For a hunting rifle I really believe in establishing a cold bore zero. What was the shot spacing on the shots. Maybe use a laser thermometer and record the barrel temp for each shot. From what I have read cold bore variation can be affected by the barrel manufacturing process and stress relieving the barrel.
@McgSpook6 ай бұрын
There used to be a big thing where people were doing cryo treatment to barrels to relieve the stress. Never see it anymore so I guess it wasnt an issue. My little devil on shoulder tells me that what people are really seeing is cheap or poorly made barrels doing what they do. Someone like Remington or Winchester just never has time to do what a good gunsmith will do. So they have slop and runout issues galore.
@nicholas17406 ай бұрын
I always check my zero with at minimum 3 shot group the day before I hunt. Period. Some rifles will have a sizable difference with a cold bore shot. So If that's the case, go out and take one shot. Wait 30 min, take another, then wait another 30 min, and take another. Then center your reticle in the middle of the group. Remove the worry and hoping... If you're traveling, or flying to a hunt, it's going to be different due to elevation, temp, and humidity changes so zero it at hunting camp. Just check it and then you can relax about that.
@700Junky6 ай бұрын
Everything affects the way your rifle shoots and must be tested. I’ve seen barrels that shoot just OK till it gets fouled with about 20 rounds, then it stacks them consistently 1/2 MOA for about 200 rounds. So that gun does not get the copper removed until accuracy starts to go. Strip out the copper, re-foul it and it’s back to shooting 1/2 MOA. Some barrels shoot better clean and cold some like it dirty. Try that.
@mikepaul24856 ай бұрын
Another thing that I have found that will affect zero is not lapping in your scope rings. I have tried this before and it does help. I had a gun that would move zero. This is about 10 years ago when I really started getting into guns and accuracy. I was researching and came across people saying to lap in your rings. So I got the stuff to do it and it worked, never had a problem with the zero after that. Yes it was the same rings and scope that I was having issues with before. From then on every scope I mount I lap the rings in.
@McgSpook6 ай бұрын
i think that just means you had bad rings. For example, people like NF will void your warranty for doing such a thing. I will say that modern mfg is capable of a lot better product then 20 years ago. In short, buy good rings and your days of lapping rings will be over.
@mikepaul24856 ай бұрын
Yes good rings do help. But it is all a tolerance stack up between the rings the mount/rail and the receiver screw holes. All three have a tolerance that can turn the rings out of parallel with each other. So when you are lapping the ring you are essentially straightening the I'd of the ring to the mount and receiver to make it all parallel to each other. Especially the Remington 700 two piece mounts will be off by a little. The last one I did I put Zeiss rings on a premium ar upper and they were still off by a little bit. They were turned one way or the other and not directly in line with each other. Nothing can be machined to 100% perfect unless it is all matched and hand fitted to that one gun. But I will stick with lapping them it makes me feel better that I did everything in my power to mount it good and solid. So I don't have any excuse other than I missed the shot and it wasn't because of my equipment.
@Longshot762x516 ай бұрын
Stop buying $25 rings.
@kenlarsen81554 ай бұрын
love your channel, canadian subsciber. im 55m, a gun nut, as far as canada goes. i have a 7 mm rem mag. i customized in 1990ish. i ts a remington 700 bdl., 7mm rem mag. i traded out wood stock for a fiberglass/ plastic stock. idk. took off the front sights, didnt like the screw holes, so cut off two inches. had it recrowned, trigger and bolt work done. also nickel plated it. so i lost 100' fps per inch , turning it into a 280, but shot reloads, getting back my velocity. also i glass bedded the action mysrelf, when i was 20ish. reloaded fire formed 160 nosler partitions and put 3 shots in a quarter off a tailgate with minimul support, probably a rolled up coat. maybe its the shooter. dont understand why your challenge was so hard. all id need to do would be adjust my zero from 1" high to zero high. anyways .....love your channel
@johnl59746 ай бұрын
please do a segment on why/how the direction of the light source changes POI. It makes o sense to me.
@rickoshea81386 ай бұрын
With open sights I can see how light direction shifts the apparent zero, but not with a scope.
@esposb67106 ай бұрын
Here in Norway, we have mandatory practice shots. Minimum 30 of them spread over atleast 2 days before we have a practical shooting "exam". Every year. 5 outta 5 shots have to be inside killzone on a reindeer target. If we have problems zeroing in, we get help from our friendly neighbourhood gun and hunting guru ( he got 64 years of hunting experience and hangs on the shooting range every week )
@brandon882716 ай бұрын
I had the same issue with the suppressor not tightened all the way. So now I have witness marks to prevent that.
@mrs.vasquezz6 ай бұрын
Just use a good mount system?
@brandon882716 ай бұрын
@@mrs.vasquezz I'm using Yhm phantom qd it works great when tight all the way.
@colinkobel28686 ай бұрын
Great demo! I see guys constantly testing speed and groups and some even say that’s enough for hunting. Wow is that wrong. To be accurate and respectful of what ever your hunting, you have to establish the zero. Sure glad you’re talking about it.
@xforce7086 ай бұрын
One thing you missed mentioning is a clean gun. My first two or three a lot of times aren’t true if I just grab a clean rifle out of the safe that’s been sitting a while. I have found some lighter fluid on a few patches before shooting to get oil out tightens things up though