When you shoot a 2k $ with a 1k scope , a $300.00 bipod ,it is not an issue to use a $120.00 bubble level.
Accuracy first in my book.
Accuracy first in my book.
Upvote 0
"broekzwans"At 100 meters canting my rifle from the bubble in the middle to touching the bubble to one of the lines gives me a deviation of about 2 to 3 centimeters.
The error increases with distance and lack of speed. The more your projectile is falling the worse the effect gets. A faster projectile will be effected less by cant than a slower projectile on the same distance.
Thank you for the detail."broekzwans"At 100 meters canting my rifle from the bubble in the middle to touching the bubble to one of the lines gives me a deviation of about 2 to 3 centimeters.
The error increases with distance and lack of speed. The more your projectile is falling the worse the effect gets. A faster projectile will be effected less by cant than a slower projectile on the same distance.
I agree with you."broekzwans"The most important thing is that you like what you buy. I personally don't mind spending a little more on something that helps my accuracy a lot. However, $100 on a bubble level is quit some money so I'm still doubting which one to buy.
"Scope mounted higher above the bore makes it worse""broekzwans"I think I have to correct myself on what enlargers the cant error: Of course more cant increases the error but also the height of the scope above the bore, higher gets worse. The distance also makes it worse. It is speed/BC independent since it is a fault caused by an angle from the original path which leads to basic geometry.
Thus short recap on what enlarges cant error:
Larger canting errors makes it worse
Longer distance makes it worse
Scope mounted higher above the bore makes it worse
Mmmm I am not sure about this. We need an expert to confirm this ."Scotchmo"
"Scope mounted higher above the bore makes it worse""broekzwans"I think I have to correct myself on what enlargers the cant error: Of course more cant increases the error but also the height of the scope above the bore, higher gets worse. The distance also makes it worse. It is speed/BC independent since it is a fault caused by an angle from the original path which leads to basic geometry.
Thus short recap on what enlarges cant error:
Larger canting errors makes it worse
Longer distance makes it worse
Scope mounted higher above the bore makes it worse
Not true for gun cant.
Imagine that you had a gun with two scopes mounted on it. One scope is mounted 2" high and the other scope is mounted 6" high. Sight both scopes for 50 yards.
Rest the gun canted 15 degrees to the right, with crosshairs on target at 50 yards. It does not matter which scope you look through, both crosshairs are still on target.
The pellet will land to the right the same predictable amount, based on the trajectory and degree of cant. It does not matter which scope you are looking through.
Low scope or high scope, keep the bubble level.
An expert at what?"GQ"
Mmmm I am not sure about this. We need an expert to confirm this ."Scotchmo"
"Scope mounted higher above the bore makes it worse""broekzwans"I think I have to correct myself on what enlargers the cant error: Of course more cant increases the error but also the height of the scope above the bore, higher gets worse. The distance also makes it worse. It is speed/BC independent since it is a fault caused by an angle from the original path which leads to basic geometry.
Thus short recap on what enlarges cant error:
Larger canting errors makes it worse
Longer distance makes it worse
Scope mounted higher above the bore makes it worse
Not true for gun cant.
Imagine that you had a gun with two scopes mounted on it. One scope is mounted 2" high and the other scope is mounted 6" high. Sight both scopes for 50 yards.
Rest the gun canted 15 degrees to the right, with crosshairs on target at 50 yards. It does not matter which scope you look through, both crosshairs are still on target.
The pellet will land to the right the same predictable amount, based on the trajectory and degree of cant. It does not matter which scope you are looking through.
Low scope or high scope, keep the bubble level.
I question this because the scope height have an impact at the target . No ?"Scotchmo"
An expert at what?"GQ"
Mmmm I am not sure about this. We need an expert to confirm this ."Scotchmo"
"Scope mounted higher above the bore makes it worse""broekzwans"I think I have to correct myself on what enlargers the cant error: Of course more cant increases the error but also the height of the scope above the bore, higher gets worse. The distance also makes it worse. It is speed/BC independent since it is a fault caused by an angle from the original path which leads to basic geometry.
Thus short recap on what enlarges cant error:
Larger canting errors makes it worse
Longer distance makes it worse
Scope mounted higher above the bore makes it worse
Not true for gun cant.
Imagine that you had a gun with two scopes mounted on it. One scope is mounted 2" high and the other scope is mounted 6" high. Sight both scopes for 50 yards.
Rest the gun canted 15 degrees to the right, with crosshairs on target at 50 yards. It does not matter which scope you look through, both crosshairs are still on target.
The pellet will land to the right the same predictable amount, based on the trajectory and degree of cant. It does not matter which scope you are looking through.
Low scope or high scope, keep the bubble level.
Scope height does not enter into the equation. It's strictly a function of pellet-drop and cant-angle.
horizontal shift = drop x sin(angle)
vertical shift = drop x (1-cos(angle))