To make this question short and sweet - if your scope is adjusted to be parallax free at a specific range, does (and if so - how) an inconsistent cheek weld affect accuracy? Answers do not need to be short and sweet. Thank you.
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If you do not have consistant NPA, Cheek weld, sight picture, sight radius, then you will never know if the problem is parallax or not.
Russ,
I'm still relatively new at this. I know what cheek weld and sight picture are. What is NPA and sight radius?
NPA - natural point of aim. Basically, where are you looking and where is the rifle aimed if you close your eyes, hold the rifle in position, and get comfortable? If it is on target and you can see the sights/scope properly, you are good to go.
Sight radius is only for irons - it is the distance between your eye, the rear sight, and the front sight. All else equal, a longer sight radius (ie, a longer barrel) will allow more precise aiming and adjustment.
I agree about your definition of sight radius, but I could not think of the term so the scope does not "ghost" or black out on the edges.
Good reason to practice a lot with a 22LR.Head pressure affects the way the gun recoils while the bullet is still moving down the barrel. Varying head pressure due to an inconsistent cheek weld will cause the point of impact to move around seemingly inexplicably. Shooting with a bipod, I find head pressure to be most noticeable on elevation.
It's all especially apparent shooting .22's because the bullets are moving so slowly. They are in the barrel roughly 3X as long as with a centerfire cartridge, so errors in your technique are magnified.