Yes the arrow is pointing forward towards the muzzle . It is solid as can be there is no movement at all so the zero doesn't change at all . One thing I noticed when your mounting the scope make sure you adjust evenly . If you adjust the front ring more than the back ring at one time it will bind and the scope won't slide forward freely . As you tighten the ring screws keep testing the movement .Hold the gun muzzle up in the air and pull the scope forward it should slide back with ease test it a few time before you start to tighten the ring screws so you get a feel how it moves and keep it that way once its all tightened up . what happens is the rings if not tightened evenly it twists the ring up on one side and down on the other . but if you keep the spacing the same like you should on any scope you mount it will not bind . I have seen people have a huge space on one side of the ring and closed on the other you can't do that on this mount . You can tell right away if it starts to bind because your scope won't fall back like it did before it started to bind . I think the people that have this mount and they still damage their scopes ,its because they had it in a bind and it wouldn't work like it should . I have a really heavy 10-40x56 scope with a 4 inch sun shade on it and I did a soft wax displacement test and it only moves the scope forward 3mm so there is not a lot of movement at all and I have a springer that kicks like a mule ,Its the hardest kicking springer I have ever shot Its the Hatsan 125 sniper in 22 cal .Its a scope killer I had to get the bullseye for this gun , so putting the rings in a bind with the sliders will cause it to not do its job ,so make sure it moves freely once your done .
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