As Promised…

Tips, tricks and lessons learned for sighting rifles…

Sighting in rifles is always interesting, even more with scopes. Here’s what I’ve learned over (mumble) years of screwups, multiple tries, and lots of help from people that actually KNOW what they are doing…

1st assumption- You have already bore sighted, laser sighted, used a collimator to get the sights/scope pretty close to on…

2nd assumption- You have reviewed your ballistics tables for the round you are going to zero/hunt with (and it’s the same round). You’ve recorded the altitude, weather (temp, humidity, etc.). This becomes the base for the ‘dope’ for that rifle/scope/round combo. If you know you are zeroing at/near sea level, and know you will be hunting at 4-6000 feet of altitude, you will know what corrections you will need when you get on site to re-zero the rifle.

Set up-
Target- Use a target that has the 1 inch blocks printed on the target, makes it MUCH easier to determine how far off one is…

Spotting scope- Nice to have, or you’re gonna be doing a LOT of walking back and forth. You can spend a little or a LOT on one, your choice…

Rifle Rest- If you are using something like a Caldwell’s Lead Sled (which are NICE, but pricey), don’t exceed 25 lbs of weight on the sled. You DO want the rifle to be able to recoil at least a little bit. If you put too much weight on it, you risk damaging the stock due to the action slamming back into the stock with NO movement (remember, most rifles are NOT fully bedded so only screws and the recoil lug are the only thing holding them in the stock). You want the front arm to hold the rifle as near the barrel end of the scope as possible, and seated as well as possible in the pad; for the butt, place it firmly into the pad and rest your shooting hand on the rifle, use the other hand to manipulate the front arm to get the proper height and aimpoint for the rifle.

If you use a bipod for the front, you are stuck with its position on the forward end of the stock. if you use a tripod /rifle rest/sandbag for the front, position it at the barrel end of the scope, or just forward of the receiver group at the thickest part of the stock (this should also be just forward of the balance point of the rifle). For the butt, use your choice of bags, but here is where it gets interesting…

Use the bags to get the proper aim point WITHOUT having to squeeze the bags. What you want to get in either case is a STABLE, REPEATABLE position for the rifle. Trust me, you can’t do that if you’re sitting there trying to squeeze a bag up, or pressing down to try to ‘flatten’ one out to get your aim point.

Clean barrel or fouling shots- You can clean your barrel with acetone to remove the light oil you (hopefully) put in the rifle the last time you cleaned it. One patch with acetone should remove the oil and allow a ‘clean’ shot on the first shot. If you choose fouling shots, run a clean patch through the bore before you start, then 3-4 fouling shots (don’t look at this as a group, because they may be flyers).

Wait 20 minutes… Why? Give the rifle time to cool down. You want to shoot what are effectively cold bore shots out of any rifle that doesn’t have a heavy barrel.

If you’re bored, go google rifle barrel harmonics– Harmonics and barrel flex are real, and play a significant part in rifle accuracy (more on that later). Also, heat weakens the barrel and allows more flex/harmonics (e.g. wider pattern of flyers). It may be that your rifle doesn’t ‘like’ a particular load, so it is always advisable to have at least a couple of different weight bullets available to check grouping (for example, my rifle does not like 168gr bullets, but does like 173-175 gr bullets (to the tune of about ½ inch tighter groups; while a friend with the identical rifle is just the opposite).

Body position- Get into a comfortable, stable shooting position, minimizing tension on the body (preferably similar to the shooting position you will use in the field). Confirm your sight picture is correct or adjust as required (no squeezing the bag)…

Do NOT put your off hand on the weapon anywhere, put it flat on the shooting bench or curled under your shooting hand.

WITH THE CHAMBER EMPTY, assume the position, get a good cheek weld, put your shooting hand on the weapon such that your palm is touching the stock in the proper position to place your finger on the trigger, DO NOT wrap your thumb over the top of the stock. Re-confirm your sight picture is correct or adjust as required (no squeezing the bag), (some people use mnemonics to confirm position, breathing, trigger pull), continue pulling the trigger until you get a surprise break on the dry fire (the sight picture should NOT change). Look at the sight picture again, if it is off to either side, you are not getting a straight pull back on the trigger and your rounds are NOT going to go where you think you’re aiming.

Lather, rinse, repeat until you get the correct finger position that does not move the rifle/change the sight picture during the trigger squeeze. Once you have done that, fire three rounds using exactly the same sight picture, hold, mnemonic, and trigger pull.

Note- you don’t need to do this fast, as you want the barrel to stay at/near ambient.

If you shoot a called flyer, shoot one more to get a good three shot group.

Once you have that group, look at the error (hopefully a fairly small one). Let’s say you are 2 in high and 1 in left. Make the BIGGER correction first, and shoot three more rounds (using the techniques above). Confirm that correcting ‘worked’, then make the smaller correction and repeat. At this point you ‘should’ be on target. If your scope is a ¼ min/click you can further refine if you desire, if it’s 1min/click, you’re done, same if it’s iron sights.

I know people claim they can zero a rifle in 2 shots, but honestly I’ve never been able to do that… Guess I’m just a dummy…

If you need to zero for 200x and only have a 100x range, look at your ballistics curve for the ammo you are shooting, look at your 200x zero and it will give you the ‘over’ at 100x (usually around an inch with most ammo).

Very carefully loosen the caps on your scope and readjust to the new zero position and re-tighten as necessary. If you have a BDC cap, I’d recommend another three shot group with a different range to check zero (e.g. select 300x BDC and the rounds should be appx 2-3 inches high depending on ballistics table).

If you have standard caps, I’d recommend zero of 200x for hunting as anything between 100x and 300x will hit within about +/-3 inches of aim point across those ranges.

At this point, I’m done; I don’t clean the rifle again until hunting is complete for the year. I also will always do at least one cold bore shot at 100x before I go into the field to hunt, just to make sure nothing got knocked loose in transit!

Disclaimer- There are tons of how to sight rifle links on the net, and plenty of forums and blogs that detail this also. These happen to be mine, based on MY experiences. YMMV, INAL, etc…

And I was not paid nor do I endorse specific products with this post, I simply did searches to find the first hits on Google for products, so there…

Shoot em good folks!

Comments

As Promised… — 17 Comments

  1. GREAT advice to beginners in rifles like me!
    My son and I are going out to the LONG range in a week or two. He wants to play with his 17HMR, and I want to try my Marlin 336 in 30-30. He’s got a spotting scope, and since my Marlin came with a scope, I’m going to print these out and try them when we go.
    Hopefully I’ll learn a thing or three!

  2. Your info is fantastic & what I’m about to say is not meant to say any differently.

    The best piece of advice I’ve ever heard about shooting- Squeeze the trigger, don’t yank. It’s not your…

    Oh, never mind. 😉

    Thanks for the info, NFO!

  3. drjim- Yeah… sigh… 🙁

    Jim- You already KNOW this…

    Snigs- Just like squeezing a tit 🙂 GENTLY 🙂

  4. Well, I tried to open your newest blog to leave a comment, but it wouldn’t open, so I’ll do it here.

    Yes, that was a lot of useless info, and who did the gypsy moth study?

    Happy Thanksgiving!

  5. Good solid advise.
    One thing folks need to remember however…the procedure pretty much shows what the firearm can do under those conditions.
    Change any one, and the results will slightly change.

    One point about the scope.
    When adjusting, always make the final adjustment in a consistent direction. (ie: final click clockwise) If you make an adjustment counter clockwise, add one more click, then go clockwise one click.

    Hope that made sense.

    Skul

  6. Thank you, I will study this more, since I don’t use optics enough to have any experience.

  7. Skul- good point… I do that automatically and didn’t even think to put it in, nor did I put in tap the scope to seat the change.

    Earl- My experience, yours may vary 🙂

  8. Actually, i prefer the one shot zero. I have done it a few times, it may not be exact but it gets you damn close.

    I have the rifle in a carriage of some sort and put the cross hairs on zero. Send one shot down range and then resent the rifle back on zero. From that point, adjust your scope to your bullet hole and you are damn close to zero. The second shot is just to verify it.

    I am not a bullseye shooter so getting me in a 3 inch circle at 200 yards is good enough for me.

    Any further tweaking would require the old fashioned way.

  9. Ray- I have to admit you are the first person I’ve ever heard that actually was able to do it! I’ve tried and never been able to make it work to my satisfaction.