Most know that if the reticle and optic are not true with one another. Hold over and elevation adjustments will not be true. Same if the rifle/optic combination is canted. I read on here and other forums that it does not matter if the reticle is trued with the rifle's bore. I feel that if you have the rifle canted when mounting your optic, then level the optic when shooting, that the bore will be off to one side or the other of your optic (think russian firearms). So my thought is this.
If the bore is off to one side or the other of the optic, the projectile has to cover that distance to reach point of aim. Not a big deal at a fixed distance but the line of sight and line of travel will not be parallel. Ignoring bullet drop (i know they don't fly in a straight line) wouldn't the point of aim vs the point of impact be changed at varying distances.
The easiest way to explain this would be to mount a laser sight to a rifle scope. Let's say you mount the laser to the 11:30 position in reference to the reticle. Zero the laser and riflescope to 100% match each other at 100 yards. Then look at something at 50 yards, then 200 yards. Ignoring the elevation error, you WILL see the windage error im talking about. This same effect should be present if the rifle scope is not truly centered over the rifle bore, or am i missing something.
If the bore is off to one side or the other of the optic, the projectile has to cover that distance to reach point of aim. Not a big deal at a fixed distance but the line of sight and line of travel will not be parallel. Ignoring bullet drop (i know they don't fly in a straight line) wouldn't the point of aim vs the point of impact be changed at varying distances.
The easiest way to explain this would be to mount a laser sight to a rifle scope. Let's say you mount the laser to the 11:30 position in reference to the reticle. Zero the laser and riflescope to 100% match each other at 100 yards. Then look at something at 50 yards, then 200 yards. Ignoring the elevation error, you WILL see the windage error im talking about. This same effect should be present if the rifle scope is not truly centered over the rifle bore, or am i missing something.