My father is a carpenter, and has several 4'-6' levels that were VERY expensive. So I did a test to check them on a known flat surface (his tablesaw outfeed table, the flattest surface on Earth and meticulously leveled to perfection):
I then proceeded to check several of my 6"-9" pocket levels on this same flat surface. I had four on hand to check. One of them was a fancy machined aluminum level that cost over $40 back in the late 90s, and it actually was the worst of the bunch. Without a single exception, I could detect that the bubble did not "return to zero" when I did this same test. It was obvious to my naked eye that the bubble was not set perfectly parallel to the straight edge on the bottom of the level.
So why would anyone trust those cheap little levels to mount a scope? The margin of error increases exponentially with shorter level bases, and combined with the short transverse surface of rail, it compounds both errors to the point that your naked eye could do a better job of leveling the scope.
Wouldn't it be better to mount the rifle into a bench vice with the bolt removed and compare the center line of the bore to the crosshairs against a known plumb object such as a plumb-bob hung from a tree branch at distance (the further the distance, the less error), or the corner of a building? This would provide a plumb reference for the crosshairs, and it would also control for any parallel "offset" between the bore centerline and crosshair centerline.
I would buy one of those wedges that make the bottom of the scope perfectly parallel with the rail, but I have a 1-piece rail with medium height rings which don't provide enough room to use it. And I don't trust that the surfaces are truly parallel, especially across such a short bearing surface.
Anyway, these are my autistic thoughts for today. I'm a new shooter, so don't hesitate to tell me why I may be wrong!
- Lay the level on a flat surface and trace it.
- Rotate the level 180 degrees, so the left side is where the right side was in the traced lines (and vice-versa)
- See if the bubble lands in exactly the same spot. If yes, the bottom side of the level is true and flat, and the bubble glass is set perfectly parallel to this plane.
I then proceeded to check several of my 6"-9" pocket levels on this same flat surface. I had four on hand to check. One of them was a fancy machined aluminum level that cost over $40 back in the late 90s, and it actually was the worst of the bunch. Without a single exception, I could detect that the bubble did not "return to zero" when I did this same test. It was obvious to my naked eye that the bubble was not set perfectly parallel to the straight edge on the bottom of the level.
So why would anyone trust those cheap little levels to mount a scope? The margin of error increases exponentially with shorter level bases, and combined with the short transverse surface of rail, it compounds both errors to the point that your naked eye could do a better job of leveling the scope.
Wouldn't it be better to mount the rifle into a bench vice with the bolt removed and compare the center line of the bore to the crosshairs against a known plumb object such as a plumb-bob hung from a tree branch at distance (the further the distance, the less error), or the corner of a building? This would provide a plumb reference for the crosshairs, and it would also control for any parallel "offset" between the bore centerline and crosshair centerline.
I would buy one of those wedges that make the bottom of the scope perfectly parallel with the rail, but I have a 1-piece rail with medium height rings which don't provide enough room to use it. And I don't trust that the surfaces are truly parallel, especially across such a short bearing surface.
Anyway, these are my autistic thoughts for today. I'm a new shooter, so don't hesitate to tell me why I may be wrong!