So yesterday I woke up, got the coffee, and sat down to plink some starlings from my three season room. I extended the legs on my Harris bipod and settled on the window ledge, took a couple shots, and sat the S510 down on the floor, which is bare concrete as we remodel the room. I started to walk away and heard something hit the ground, and the left leg had de-telescoped, sending the rifle onto its left side. I picked it up and looked it over for any obvious damage, and decided to quickly confirm my zero on some spinners at 60 yards. The pellets were going way too the right so I took it into the basement and set it up at 10m and sure enough it was shooting around 18MOA to the right. I dialed in the windage and noticed the knob seemed to be sticking (it's on the right side, so didn't hit the ground), but got it back on target, albeit without much adjustment left.
The scope it one of the Millet TRS-1's which has served me well, but there's something amiss. Has anyone else had this happen with a scope, i.e. getting knocked that far out of alignment and the windage binding?
BTW, the Harris (S-BRM with notched legs) had something wrong with the locking mechanism where it would catch but not fully engage. I played around with it a while and it seems to be working as expected again but it definitely shook my confidence a bit, although I've been using these for years with no issues until this incident.
The scope it one of the Millet TRS-1's which has served me well, but there's something amiss. Has anyone else had this happen with a scope, i.e. getting knocked that far out of alignment and the windage binding?
BTW, the Harris (S-BRM with notched legs) had something wrong with the locking mechanism where it would catch but not fully engage. I played around with it a while and it seems to be working as expected again but it definitely shook my confidence a bit, although I've been using these for years with no issues until this incident.