I wanted to touch base again regarding failure.
Failure of your optical system seems to be the number one issue I experience while teaching folks how to long range.
So tell your stories of epic failure here - the more insane the optic the better. Doesn’t have to be the scope failing either - it can be your dumb ass failing too.
I’ll start with two personal failures.
1. I was hiking up a serious mountain to engage some targets we had set up in a mystery shopper fashion next valley over. This is always neat - you go out the day before and each person sets a steel target wherever they want and without anyone else seeing where they put it. Easier in the mountains.
So I had just picked up a Schmidt Bender 1-8. And the way I had slung my rifle brought the scope into contact with my American Kami knife hilt’s glass breaker. It was an adventure.
2. Work issued me an SR25 with a Nightforce 3.5-15 F1. We went to a training class and were working on “SDM in the back of the truck” type work. So slow driving while shooting and fast driving while transitioning range to range.
I had decided to jam myself in the back by the cab as the best position. Dumb ass driver takes the WRONG turn and runs the truck into a tree so hard it breaks the windshield. And incidentally rips my rifle out of my hands and craps it under the duallies.
Nightforces are tough - but when you rip the top rail off your SR25 it’s okay for it to be Z shaped after that.
I hadn’t slung up or I might be dead now.
As for “the scope ate it” , I seem to have awful luck with Vortex optics. Almost every one I have owned went back at some point. The PST Gen 1s, the Razor HDII, the Strike Eagles, all of it back to the factory.
I remember when my friggin HdIIs illumination turret started unscrewing way too far...
It seems in fact that many of the Japanese made optics die on me far too soon. The Burris 1-8 was among them. And enough bushnells to fill a trash can.
Failure of your optical system seems to be the number one issue I experience while teaching folks how to long range.
So tell your stories of epic failure here - the more insane the optic the better. Doesn’t have to be the scope failing either - it can be your dumb ass failing too.
I’ll start with two personal failures.
1. I was hiking up a serious mountain to engage some targets we had set up in a mystery shopper fashion next valley over. This is always neat - you go out the day before and each person sets a steel target wherever they want and without anyone else seeing where they put it. Easier in the mountains.
So I had just picked up a Schmidt Bender 1-8. And the way I had slung my rifle brought the scope into contact with my American Kami knife hilt’s glass breaker. It was an adventure.
2. Work issued me an SR25 with a Nightforce 3.5-15 F1. We went to a training class and were working on “SDM in the back of the truck” type work. So slow driving while shooting and fast driving while transitioning range to range.
I had decided to jam myself in the back by the cab as the best position. Dumb ass driver takes the WRONG turn and runs the truck into a tree so hard it breaks the windshield. And incidentally rips my rifle out of my hands and craps it under the duallies.
Nightforces are tough - but when you rip the top rail off your SR25 it’s okay for it to be Z shaped after that.
I hadn’t slung up or I might be dead now.
As for “the scope ate it” , I seem to have awful luck with Vortex optics. Almost every one I have owned went back at some point. The PST Gen 1s, the Razor HDII, the Strike Eagles, all of it back to the factory.
I remember when my friggin HdIIs illumination turret started unscrewing way too far...
It seems in fact that many of the Japanese made optics die on me far too soon. The Burris 1-8 was among them. And enough bushnells to fill a trash can.