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What kind of mount would you recommend?i don't but lots of folks do that. the zero may be different for each, but if you get a good mount, it should be fairly consistent going back and forth.
personally, i would recommend a bobro engineering mount.What kind of mount would you recommend?
I second the spuhr. Luckily they make a qd for 35mm for OP's Mark 5. I couldn't find this model on mile high however.Spuhr personally if I was ever going to go QD or even swap optics back and forth on any sort of regular basis. They seem to be very consistent as well.
interesting, i have an offset/angled mount on my AR and enjoy it....never considered using one on a bolt action rifle.
This was exactly my experience. Dumped the QD and went with standard Spuhr cantilever... allows mounting on any of my bolt or AR platforms with proper eye relief. Fix it Sticks torque limiter ensures consistency. Much happier with this setup.Keep in mind, many times QD mounts are best used on one rifle. It sounds counterintuitive, but many times you’ll find the tension used on one rail is different than another. You’ll spend as much or more time messing with it than just unbolting and bolting rings or mounts.
Typically QD mounts are best on a single platform and to be used when you need to break down for travel, cleaning, or emergency/failure.
Any quality bolt on rings or mount will serve you well. I prefer ARC rings as they use the same hex key and torque limiter for the rail clams as well as the rings. And it’s only 4 bolts total.
Keep in mind, many times QD mounts are best used on one rifle. It sounds counterintuitive, but many times you’ll find the tension used on one rail is different than another. You’ll spend as much or more time messing with it than just unbolting and bolting rings or mounts.
Typically QD mounts are best on a single platform and to be used when you need to break down for travel, cleaning, or emergency/failure.
Any quality bolt on rings or mount will serve you well. I prefer ARC rings as they use the same hex key and torque limiter for the rail clams as well as the rings. And it’s only 4 bolts total.
Buy a good set of rings and you can swap scopes easily. Mounts and QDs are not needed and I wouldn't put a QD on a precision rifle anyways. I want my optic properly torqued down. As mentioned by a poster above a set of Seekins rings will do everything you need. I move scopes around with Seekins and never an issue. Simple and relatively inexpensive and they hold.
I know the elitists and gun snobs wont like this but...
When it comes to scope mounts, there is a common belief that you need "good ones"... meaning expensive is better. Expensive is nice, but not needed when it comes to scope mounts.
I would argue that the scope mount is one of the best places to save money on your rig and give up nothing in reasonable terms of reliability or performance. Not to suggest that junk is good... no... that's not what I'm saying at all. I'm saying not to get too hung up on some MIL spec bla bla when something much less expensive will do the job just fine.
Good barrel is key... good scope is key... decent trigger is good but scope mounts are structural and nobody needs to pay SPUR $400 for a reliable scope mount when there are plenty of good enough ones on Amazon for $40.
Hey, if you have money to burn, go for it... But QD or not, I have never had a problem with what many guys here would probably consider NFG.
Why are you quoting me and saying "elitist and gun snob"? I mentioned a set of rings that are about $110. Not exactly elitist.
i have been called a poor more than once, and i am cheap, but i try not to skimp on things involved in actually sending a round.Sorry, I didn't mean to put words in your mouth. I didn't mean to infer that I was referring to you by that comment. I just know those guys are out there that criticize anything not made in America that usually costs more than many can afford.