01 January 2007, 00:08
robthomMounting a 'scope with 6 ins eye relief?
Ok, gentlemen, I have a 'long' problem.
I obtained a 4x36 German scope to go on a .375H&H mag. I was concerned about safe eye relief and getting bumped / cut.
The scope has an eye relief of a little over 6 inches. While my .375 is being completed, I mounted the scope on my .338-06 in Talley mounts.
I found that I must move my head back on the stock having shouldered the rifle. Since it is a stalking / deer rifle, while not completely satisfactory, it is not disastrous.
However, when the time comes to mount it on my .375, I am going to have the same problem. Additionally, the scope is 11.75 inches long - a fairly short scope.
So, I was looking for advice.
Would I gain enough eye relief / position by using a side mount mount like Griffin & Howe or Wiliams?
Thanks in anticipation.
01 January 2007, 01:42
woodsHey rob
You could help the situation by getting a set of dual dovetail bases, maybe even dual dovetails with the offset front,
dual dovetail offset front basesthen get rings with an offset
offset front ringand you can move that scope quite a bit.
01 January 2007, 12:58
robthomThanks for the links.
At the back of my mind, I thought Leupold might be the way to go. They do seem to have most angles covered and at 'sensible' prices too!
I was wondering what it might take to mount correctly for sight picture / 'scope occular "ring shadow" to obtain full field of view.
Of the other options thought of, besides the side mounts mentioned above, which I quite like the look of, I had thought of the front scope base mounted on the barrel. I have seen this with European, especially German rifles with large diameter objective lenses.
I think this system is a 'claw' mount system, and very expensive. A large diameter front ring is 'wrapped' around the objective lenses and the ring fits into a 'block' base dovetailed / silver soldered onto the barrel just ahead of the receiver. I believe Rechnagel makes these set ups, and as I mentioned above, they are expensive.
03 January 2007, 20:53
bowhuntrrlIt sounds like the scope is a "long eye relief" scope which are not well suited for rifles unless they are mounted in the "Scout" configuration. You will need to have scope mount holes drilled and tapped to locate the scope further away from your face so that your normal shooting position on the stock doesn't suffer.