Curious whether it's bad to have a scope that's zero'd outside the middle of it's adjustment range?
Let's say I have a quality scope (Nightforce) and I mount it on a rifle with a 40 MOA base. If a 100 yard zero leaves me with 24 mils up (out of a max of 27) is this a bad thing?
I've read on the error-net that it's best to have a scope zero'd in the middle of the adjustment range, but not why or what the downside of not doing that is.
Not knowing the internal mechanics of a scope very well I'm not sure if one might damage a scope by having it sit at the outer edges of adjustment for long periods or anything. Or might it be because some scopes don't track as accurately toward the edges?
Let's say I have a quality scope (Nightforce) and I mount it on a rifle with a 40 MOA base. If a 100 yard zero leaves me with 24 mils up (out of a max of 27) is this a bad thing?
I've read on the error-net that it's best to have a scope zero'd in the middle of the adjustment range, but not why or what the downside of not doing that is.
Not knowing the internal mechanics of a scope very well I'm not sure if one might damage a scope by having it sit at the outer edges of adjustment for long periods or anything. Or might it be because some scopes don't track as accurately toward the edges?