Hey guys,
I've watched a few videos of zeroing scopes (never done it before) and it sounds like adjusting the turrets to the point of impact is one of the more popular ways. I just got a Hawke Vantage 4x32 AO Mildot scope and am starting to play around with it. It seems one of the pre-reqs too is to have the gun in a stable position so it's not moving around etc. Anyone have ideas on what's laying around the house that I could easily use to stabilize the gun without having to buy gun rests, bipods, clamps, etc? I really just bought the gun for squirrel control in our smaller backyard. I probably wouldn't be shooting more than 10-20 yards max in most cases. Oh, it's a Crosman 1322 btw. I have the stock and just updated to a steel breech. I may put a longer barrel on it at some point. Just want to get the scope sighted in before I start buying more stuff though.
I've watched a few videos of zeroing scopes (never done it before) and it sounds like adjusting the turrets to the point of impact is one of the more popular ways. I just got a Hawke Vantage 4x32 AO Mildot scope and am starting to play around with it. It seems one of the pre-reqs too is to have the gun in a stable position so it's not moving around etc. Anyone have ideas on what's laying around the house that I could easily use to stabilize the gun without having to buy gun rests, bipods, clamps, etc? I really just bought the gun for squirrel control in our smaller backyard. I probably wouldn't be shooting more than 10-20 yards max in most cases. Oh, it's a Crosman 1322 btw. I have the stock and just updated to a steel breech. I may put a longer barrel on it at some point. Just want to get the scope sighted in before I start buying more stuff though.