You mean to tell me that you prefer this to a video with loud obnoxious music, and a person with no script stumbling over words, and struggling to explain things something they don't appear to really understand themselves?
Thanks for the information of "checking the parallax"! That's very important. These few days I've been zeroing a scope, but when I moved behind the still scope, the crosshair moved with me! I didn't know where to shoot! I just tried my best to look through the scope in the middle. Having watching this video, I tried to adjust the parallax, and it worked! -- at some point, the crosshair stopped moving! Thanks again!👍👍👍
@ 2:25 It sounds as if you've put it in the most logical manner possible. If anyone with a real mind for accuracy shooting keeps your words of wisdom here in mind, they'll have any parallax issues settled easily. Nice work.
Maybe one thing to explain is the positioning of the scope on the rifle in the first place? I'm a newbie and heard that you need to have it as far away from your eye as possible - but obviously you still need to be able to focus AND have no "gray rings" around the image?
Great video, super easy to understand!! My problem is that my diopter doesn’t lock and moves easily on my vx-5 so any suggestions on what to do? I was thinking of maybe putting some sort of mark on the scope.
@speedloads my question is. Does it matter if you are in the high or low power of the scope when focusing the redical? I ask because on my FFP scope the cross hairs are so small on low power. IMO i dont see why it would matter. Other then it is easier to find the correct sight picture on the lower power.
My fast focus eye piece is a bit wiggly. I notice when I look down the scope my reticle moves quite a bit. Is this normal? Most scopes I have are solid and have no wobble. With this one my reticle literally moves when I mess with the diopter. I know on yours you locked the diopter but on my vortex strike eagle it doesn’t seem to have any way to lock it in place.
I haven't seen a single video that actually explains setting diopter. the reason you look away and don't want your eye to adjust your lens to bring the reticle in focus is you want your eye focused at infinity when the crosshair is in focus. the scope is designed to work with your eye focused at infinity
Scopes that don't have the side focus have a fixed parallax. You adjust the diopter to your eye, and hope for the best. Most of the scopes I grew up with were fixed parallax. It's really not that important, until you get into long range and/or precision shooting.
I think it is a Thunder Beast. I ordered one not too long ago... on waiting list. It is high quality. thunderbeastarms.com/products/bipod www.milehighshooting.com/thunder-beast-tbac-bipod/
@@jackdubois4208 in this video Tom B. moved this bipod to the AT-X. You have a clearer picture of the company logo: ua-cam.com/video/YZDstC4ZxGU/v-deo.html and X-RING has a great comparison vid. Thunderbeast Bipod vs Atlas BT46 : ua-cam.com/video/T2hyft1UbLM/v-deo.html
Simple/straightforward/clear explanation.
They should ALL be like this - and without unnecessary, disturbing music.
We strive for professionalism, all in a clear and concise delivery. Thank you very much for taking the time to watch
You mean to tell me that you prefer this to a video with loud obnoxious music, and a person with no script stumbling over words, and struggling to explain things something they don't appear to really understand themselves?
Out of 4 or 5 videos on this subject, this video was the most clear, succinct, and comprehensible of all! Thank you!👍
your the first one to explain to me that the diopter and paralax have an affect on each other
It's the truth
It's the truth
I’ve been confused about parallax for months, this was very well articulated and explained, plus nice and short
Explained in a concise manner that was easy to understand and put straight to use.
Great video! 👍
Fantastic sir, thank you very much, that's our goal
Seriously thanks, I have seen many videos like 15-30 minutes long that leave my brain out of focus. You just explained it in 3. Thanks.
This is the best explanation of diopter and parallax video yet i ever watched
Spread the good word!
Easy and well explained and to the point, no BS. Thank you
Excellent video, very informative and well explained. Thank you Sir
Best explanation i have heard so far, very helpful, thanks.
Thank you very much sir, I appreciate your feedback. Clear and concise is what we aim for.
These videos on fundamentals are great. Love it.
Fo Sho! More to come.
perfect. simple and concise. best one i have seen on the subject
Thank you sir, that's our goal, appreciate you taking the time to watch
About the best and simplest explanation I have found. Thank you!
Perfect... thanks for the video... I searched for a lot of tutorials how to set a new scope (my first) and this parts was not mentioned anywhere...
Best explanation I have found yet. Thanks
Thank god i found you're video. By far the best one out there. Thank you
Why thank you very much sir, please tell your friends
I've subscribed because of your explanation, brilliant I actually understand it now, thanks
Thanks for the information of "checking the parallax"! That's very important. These few days I've been zeroing a scope, but when I moved behind the still scope, the crosshair moved with me! I didn't know where to shoot! I just tried my best to look through the scope in the middle. Having watching this video, I tried to adjust the parallax, and it worked! -- at some point, the crosshair stopped moving! Thanks again!👍👍👍
Very helpful, new to rifles and just bought a scope with parallax adjustment and you answered every question I had!
Beautiful, clear and concise explanation.Thank you so much.
The best explanation on the internet for sure!!! Thankyou sir!
Excellent content this easy to understand, I Need N EYE APPOINTMENT FIRST . THANK YOU FOR YOUR GREAT INFO
Thank you for taking the time to watch and comment, we appreciate it
Great explanation,thank you very much!👍👍
Great explanation! thank you ... thank you ... thank you!
Good job, thank you! Very well explained.
Great explanation making it so easy to understand.
Great video! You explain it very well. Thanks
Thank you very much @Rocket Surgeon, your kind words are appreciated
great video, just realised I have been doing it wrong for years
Very well explained sir.
Thank you 🙏🤜🤛
Thank you very much
Awesome video
@ 2:25 It sounds as if you've put it in the most logical manner possible. If anyone with a real mind for accuracy shooting keeps your words of wisdom here in mind, they'll have any parallax issues settled easily. Nice work.
Thank you very much @Steven Terry, we greatly appreciate your kind words. We strive to make the information as clear and repeatable as possible
Great explanation 👍🏼
Thank you, we try and boil it down to the simplest terms possible
Nice simple explanation for a noob like me , thanks .
Simple explanation, tnx that help me a lot
We are here to help, thank you for the feedback
Maybe one thing to explain is the positioning of the scope on the rifle in the first place? I'm a newbie and heard that you need to have it as far away from your eye as possible - but obviously you still need to be able to focus AND have no "gray rings" around the image?
Great idea for an upcoming video
What type of scope is this and what is it best for ? It’s beautiful
Great video, super easy to understand!! My problem is that my diopter doesn’t lock and moves easily on my vx-5 so any suggestions on what to do? I was thinking of maybe putting some sort of mark on the scope.
What if i dont have parallax adjustments? How do I mitigate that? Perfect cheek placement?
@speedloads my question is. Does it matter if you are in the high or low power of the scope when focusing the redical? I ask because on my FFP scope the cross hairs are so small on low power. IMO i dont see why it would matter. Other then it is easier to find the correct sight picture on the lower power.
Tod Hodnett says max power, but general consensus is low power where reticle details are discernible.
My fast focus eye piece is a bit wiggly. I notice when I look down the scope my reticle moves quite a bit. Is this normal? Most scopes I have are solid and have no wobble. With this one my reticle literally moves when I mess with the diopter. I know on yours you locked the diopter but on my vortex strike eagle it doesn’t seem to have any way to lock it in place.
Simple thanks 👍
Welcome!
I haven't seen a single video that actually explains setting diopter. the reason you look away and don't want your eye to adjust your lens to bring the reticle in focus is you want your eye focused at infinity when the crosshair is in focus. the scope is designed to work with your eye focused at infinity
what if you dont have a side focus knob?
Scopes that don't have the side focus have a fixed parallax. You adjust the diopter to your eye, and hope for the best. Most of the scopes I grew up with were fixed parallax. It's really not that important, until you get into long range and/or precision shooting.
Nice
Parallax is same as center the scope ?
Hi expert why my scope I view the images not stable move around????? Thks expert
Thanks:)
Only adjustments the side of the scope ? Thks
What Bipod is that? Does anyone know?
I think it is a Thunder Beast. I ordered one not too long ago... on waiting list. It is high quality.
thunderbeastarms.com/products/bipod
www.milehighshooting.com/thunder-beast-tbac-bipod/
@@mrtdiver thank you very much!
@@jackdubois4208 in this video Tom B. moved this bipod to the AT-X. You have a clearer picture of the company logo:
ua-cam.com/video/YZDstC4ZxGU/v-deo.html
and X-RING has a great comparison vid. Thunderbeast Bipod vs Atlas BT46 :
ua-cam.com/video/T2hyft1UbLM/v-deo.html
Neither Eye piece focus nor target focus has anything to do with parallax