When you fire the gun it will jump. There's no possibility of putting it back precisely where it was when you fired. If you adjust the scope after the gun moved it won't work. You'll be adjusting the scope as if the gun had fired from its current position, not the position when it fired.
Best you can do is shoot a small group of 3-5 rounds and set your scope to the center.
you literally just aim where you fired the first shot, then change turret positions. even if the gun flies over your head as long as the scope hasn't moved it doesn't matter.
What kind of scope do you have that you can see a 0.3-inch hole at 100 or 200 yards? In my 25x56 I can't see'em.
Eh I mean if you can't see your mark, then how do you even tell you're accurate in the first place lol.
Wouldn't he have a spotter with a second scope?
Maybe i wasn't clear, this is what I mean you do
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