I am building my own rifle and your scope is a strong consideration. I wish there was a way to look the scope over before I buy. I am a member of Mifflin County sportsman association. Next time you go there let me know or maybe you could have a range day.
It would depend on where in the adjustment range the scope zeroes out. For this reason most shooters use a sloped base in order to maximize the amount of available adjustment. It would be impossible to calculate where in the adjustment range the scope will zero. If the mounts you use place the zero in the exact center of the range you would have half of the range up and half of the range down. Since the scope has a minimum of 30 MILS of total adjustment if the scope zeroed in the exact center you would have 15 MILS up and 15 MILS down. The sloped base would provide a greater amount of upward adjustment and maximize the amount you have available.
I am building my own rifle and your scope is a strong consideration. I wish there was a way to look the scope over before I buy. I am a member of Mifflin County sportsman association. Next time you go there let me know or maybe you could have a range day.
We will be heading out to the Mifflin club at some point, just not sure when. Another option would be to visit our warehouse in Hummelstown PA
@@tractoptics1120 Thank you. I am waiting on my Terminus action, When I pick that up in the next week I will plan on stopping by.
@@johnsimonelli9988 With COVID 19 the warehouse is currently closed to visitors. Once things open back up we can certainly help you.
@@tractoptics1120 I understand. Thank you.
That is a sweet rifle brother! What caliber is it?
How many mils of elevation available after zeroing at 100 yards with 6.5 Creedmoor?
It would depend on where in the adjustment range the scope zeroes out. For this reason most shooters use a sloped base in order to maximize the amount of available adjustment. It would be impossible to calculate where in the adjustment range the scope will zero. If the mounts you use place the zero in the exact center of the range you would have half of the range up and half of the range down. Since the scope has a minimum of 30 MILS of total adjustment if the scope zeroed in the exact center you would have 15 MILS up and 15 MILS down. The sloped base would provide a greater amount of upward adjustment and maximize the amount you have available.
@@tractoptics1120 thanks.
40 mils with a 34mm tube lol
The official specification of the scope is 30 MILS of total elevation