Just wanted to jump in on this thread also. I posted in yermans thread also. Here is what I said-
Yerman,
I thought this sounded very odd as I have never heard of anything like this having to do with a parallax lens. So I looked in to it a bit. I am assuming your initials are BW,is that correct? I found that what we did to the scope was tweak the objective cell(which is what sets the parallax). What that entails is turning the threaded cell ,which the objective lenses set in, until all the parallax numbers line up. There are a number of things that could of caused the parallax to be off. Something as simple as a sunshade being on extremely tight and then taken off could slightly spin the objective cell for example.Another could be misaligned rings putting tension on the scope tube could cause the parallax cam pin to get slightly distorted. We could of just not set it properly when we assembled it etc,etc,etc. Anyhow, there are a number of more possible causes. Without personally seeing your scope I wouldnt be able to tell you, but I can tell you that its definitely not a common thing whether caused by use or by us from the very start.
On to the extreme canted base issue, if you are zeroed near the bottom of the travel the parallax numbers will not line up. It becomes even more pronounced in a scope like ours with a short focal length. However, since using a 45moa or more base is intended for extreme long range shooting you would not be shooting those distances with the turret/erector maxed down(at your 100yd zero). With 30+ mils of travel and a short focal length we are bending the rays at some very sharp angles. So there is going to be compromise. There is no getting around that. I know as shooters and human beings we want the best of both worlds, but running a base that zero's your rifle with the travel maxed down is going to require some compromise. Its just physics. In EVERY riflescope out there you are going to have the best optical performance of that scope when the erector tube is centered in the travel. The further away from center you get, the more degradation you will have in optical performance.
If you or anyone else has any questions about this or anything to do with our scopes and/or optics in general please feel free to contact me anytime.
Best Regards
Scott