Hey all,
so I bought my first scope last night (besides the one that came atop of my Remmy 597), had it mounted to my gun at the shop. I'm new to this whole scope thing, I've always been an iron sights kind of guy. So I chose the Nikon monarch 3 in 4-16x50mm because it seemed to fit my needs the best at my entry price range, will probably upgrade later and put this on a .223 down the road most likely.
Anyway, my question lies with zeroing the scope. Part of the reason I chose the Nikon was for the zero reset turrets. I think I understand how to zero the firearm, but not how to reset the windage/elevation to zero. So my understanding is that you zero the scope, click click click, good it shoots where it should, then you pull up on the turret and spin it until it falls on the zero. So if I'm understanding the manual correctly, the gun/scope is now zero and you're ready to rock.
What I don't understand and can't find information on is how to physically reset the zero. If someone could give me some insight that would be awesome!
Thanks,
James
so I bought my first scope last night (besides the one that came atop of my Remmy 597), had it mounted to my gun at the shop. I'm new to this whole scope thing, I've always been an iron sights kind of guy. So I chose the Nikon monarch 3 in 4-16x50mm because it seemed to fit my needs the best at my entry price range, will probably upgrade later and put this on a .223 down the road most likely.
Anyway, my question lies with zeroing the scope. Part of the reason I chose the Nikon was for the zero reset turrets. I think I understand how to zero the firearm, but not how to reset the windage/elevation to zero. So my understanding is that you zero the scope, click click click, good it shoots where it should, then you pull up on the turret and spin it until it falls on the zero. So if I'm understanding the manual correctly, the gun/scope is now zero and you're ready to rock.
What I don't understand and can't find information on is how to physically reset the zero. If someone could give me some insight that would be awesome!
Thanks,
James