1. do i have to lap these rings when installing the scope? it seems everyone here laps the rings to make sure they line up correctly. with the rings having the round post on the bottom i don't see how you could miss align them. also proper tecnique if yes.
2. will i have to shim the bases to get the full advantage out of this scope? if so proper tecnique for this also.
bear in mind that the most expensive scope i owned before was a $32 bushnell sport view. no problems with it ever just upgrading O.K. upgrading a lot.
Just don't want to wreck a quality piece of glass with pure stupidity or at least something that can be prevented.
quote:Yes you need?to lap the rings....the rings aren't the only reason to lap.....the action itself can be off a few thousandths and then the bases and finally the rings thus a little here and more there can cause misalignment enough to matter or a least marr the scope...and a GREAT scope is what you have....to lap you need a lap kit with a lap bar and abrasive and then solvent to clean the abrasive from the rings...kits such as from Sinclair Intl. come with instructions.....as for shimming....it should be necessary only for extreme range shooting 600plus yards and the shim goes under the rear base and will allow for the longer range zero with some adjustment still left in the scope....for under 600yd shooting...shims will not be necessary for most?scope-gun-load combos......details count and make for a consistant shooting accurate gun/scope/load/shooter combo....good luck and good shooting!!!
Originally posted by bowiler:
took the plunge so to say just bought a leupold varix-III 3.5-10x 40 lr m3 with the premire riticle gen/2 mill dot upgrade. the rile i plan to put it on is a rem 700 30-06 with colate ultimate sniper stock. i have leupold qr bases on the rifle already and ordered the rings with th scope. now the question/questions...1. do i have to lap these rings when installing the scope? it seems everyone here laps the rings to make sure they line up correctly. with the rings having the round post on the bottom i don't see how you could miss align them. also proper tecnique if yes.
2. will i have to shim the bases to get the full advantage out of this scope? if so proper tecnique for this also.
bear in mind that the most expensive scope i owned before was a $32 bushnell sport view. no problems with it ever just upgrading O.K. upgrading a lot.
Just don't want to wreck a quality piece of glass with pure stupidity or at least something that can be prevented.
I would also suggest a set of good scope caps. I use the removable rubber ones from Sinclair, but some folks like the Butler Creek flip up look. PUT THE CAPS ON when you clean your rifle. Solvents are hell on coatings, and if you use a bornze brush, when it exits the barrel you get a nice mist of solvent that can float back on your objective lens. Over time, it can ruin a scope's coating. Also, I once inadvertently poked my cleaning rod into my scope eyepiece lens--yuck. Only happened once but with the caps on it wouldn't have mattered.
You didn't ask about lens care, but buy yourself a can of "dust off" compressed air and use that to keep the lenses dust free instead of WIPING. I don't care what you wipe with, it will scratch. Either the "cloth" itself of some particles on the lens that get ground in. A camera buff friend of mine taught me to blow the dust off with the compressed air, and leave it at that. Clean by rubbing only if absolutely necessary. Go to a high end camera store and ask them about lens cleaning cloths before you grab your T-shirt and rub..
Roger