This is a typical question about bore height using a mount with built in MOA (40 MOA example in first post).
Just how accurate do you need to be when you measure bore height?
Is a tenth of an inch good enough?
We all know that 1 MOA is about 1.047" @ 100 yds,
or 10.47" at 1000yds.
Dividing 1MOA @ 100yds by 3600 gives us 1MOA @ one inch, or about 0.00029".
How about 40 MOA?
40 MOA is about 41.88" @ 100 yds
or 418.8" at 1000yds,
or 0.01163" per inch.
The original question was where to measure bore height with a 40 MOA mount.
The dimensional slope from rear ring (or front ring) to turret center (about 2 inches) for 40 MOA will be
about 0.02328".
Using the tangent function, rise over length, of 40MOA scope tilt (2/3 degree)=0.01163" per each inch of length.
100yds is 3600 inches, 1000yds is 36,000 inches. 40 moa @ 1000yds is about 418.68"
For example; measure scope center over bore height at the turret and get 1.7",
you should get about 1.723" at the rear ring, or 1.677" at the front ring.
Plug those numbers into your favorite ballistic calculator to see what drop @ 1000yds you get using either.
With my earlier example, 85.5 berger, 3000fps, sight height of
1.72" gives 280.8" drop @ 1000 yds, sight height of 1.70" gives 281" drop @ 1000yds,
sight height of
1.68" gives 281.2" drop @ 1000 yds, a total difference of 0.4".
That's about
0.038 MOA.
Then my question,
Is a tenth of an inch good enough?
0.1 inch ERROR in bore height measurement (per JBM calculator)
is a little less than an inch @ 1000yds.
Lots better than my shooting
Someone mentioned 1/4 inch is good enough.
0.25" error in your scope height measurement will be about 2.3" @ 1000yds.
That's almost 1/2 the 1000 yd F-Open X ring.
Do you want to give away half the X-Ring?
Guess that's what sighters are for