So I just noticed I was shooting a 6” round target. The round center crosshairs covers the bullseye entirely. Should I just shoot with the center dot under the bullseye with the shot making placement in the actual bullseye? Kind of how you would shoot irons sights on a pistol?
Originally Posted By: AWSI have shot many sub 1" groups with a 4x scope and a number of them downn in the.3's. If you are shooting groups not sighting in Use a round bulseye and set it in one of the quadrants of the scope and hold so it is just touching the vertical and horizontal crosshairs.
Alot of time I'll use a benchrest target and set the box in the quadrant with the crosshairs just touching the square.
Shooting using the aimpoint in the quadrant you can shoot 4 groups by putting the aimpoint in a differant quadrant for each group.
This is with a Mannlicher stocked Sako Vixen with a Weaver 1-3x20mm scope on 3x at 200 yards, I was holding the orange dot in the upper left quadrant of the scope.
This is a 90 year old German Drilling with a Leupold VX-1 1-4x20mm shotgun sc0pe at 200 yards again with the dot in the upper left quadrant.
A Hungarian Combo gun 12ga/22 Sav. Highpower with a Nikon 1.5-4.5x20mm
At 300 yards again holding the dot in the upper left quadrant(my favorite quadrant to shoot a a single group)
This is with a Weaver K-3 3x scope and a Springfield 840 in 222 Rem. I shot the first three shot group and thought it was a fluke and shot a second group on the lower target, it wasn't a fluke, that oldtimer could really shoot. It had the original trigger, Weaver stamped sidemount, it was in a fajen stock,
This is another German Drilling in 7x57Rimmed with a Weaver K-1.5 1.5x scope at 100 yards.
Low power scopes can shoot very small groups when you learn how to use them and they make some very long shots also.
Most of my rifles carry scopes that range from 1x on the bottom end to 6x on the top and I never feel under scoped. Most never come of the lowest setting.