Re: Vertical Crosshair to Barrel Bore
What if I am shooting upside, hangin from a tree... or how about if I was laying on my side because I ate too much for lunch ?
Sounds like a bunch of people guessing... cause they haven't done it.
The thing everyone misses in all this is, as well as, in those diagrams, in showing what it might look like the odds are the crosshair is probably not off beyond the width of the bullet you are shooting. Heck everyone puts a bit of windage in their rifle when zeroing, so that would mean there is some offset from the mechanical center of the scope, and yet we still manage to hit without have to dial that zero windage out at distance... why -- it is too small and we can't see it. or it is too large and you do see it and mistake it for something else, as in fix your rifle it needs truing.
Yes if you exaggerate the effects you can make them noticeable and certainly people love to exaggerate this stuff to prove a point. But in practical application it is a non-issue in 98.997% of the cases out there. Sure people will cant enough to cause an issue, but that is because the rifle is level and their shoulder is not, they move the rifle off center after the fact but before the shot.
Here is a great example, I took this picture during the SHC in WY, this shooter was the match winner, and I watched him level and then move off level, as I said I watch for this specifically because people make such a big deal of it.
Look:
here was the terrain the closest target here was 900 yards:
The biggest talkers shoot the least amount of shots under these conditions and will always crunch numbers and cite values, but don't' have the practical experience to show for it. There is a difference between running a series of "what ifs" and going out and doing it and recording the shots on target. If a scope manufacturer will tell you 2% off on the reticle is spec, I would guess there must be a reason for it, like under practical conditions it is a non-issue. A 1 MPH wind is 10 inches... so unless you can hold the wind to within .5 MPH, I would say:
<span style="font-weight: bold">Focus on the fundamentals, level you scope to the fall of gravity and be consistent on the stock and you'll find a lot of these problems will go away. </span>
Canting isn't as bad as lack of consistency from shot to shot, the level is there to identify your consistency. If you identify a lack of consistency you have to take steps to correct it, which should be adjusting the system unless you want to start all over <span style="text-decoration: underline">to train you</span>, which means, now that you have identified what would be a <span style="font-style: italic">"bad habit"</span> you are looking at least 9000 perfect repetitions to fix it. Any break in that perfection and you have to start all over again. So if we say this isn't a bad habit but part of our natural position, moving the system to adjust for this will lead towards consistency, why because our natural inclination is what the level showed us so why fight it.