They are expensive. I think the biggest mistake is using it to zero in, then going home without actually practicing from a standing or sitting position without the lead sled.
I see too many people with all sorts of rests who never just stand up and practice what they will be doing in the woods.
Yup. I figure that will be an issue. The scope has been boresighted so hopefully it's already close. I just want to get a good group using this rest. I'm not as picky sighting in guns as I am with a bow.I have one just like this one. I tried using it to sight in my shotgun with the slug barrel on. However there was a problem and I think you might have the same problem with your muzzy. With my shotgun being a pump there was no way to keep it strapped in and reload it. Therefore there is no way of knowing that your gun is shooting from the same position every time. With having to reload your muzzy after every shot I think you will run into the same problem.
Just my thoughts.
Brock, I always like to have some sort of rest. Even if it's leaning on a tree or sitting and using my knees. Free hand shots are not high percentage shots.Then again, a shot without a solid rest is not a shot to take... at least that is my belief these days.
A lead sled can be real hard on an old or cheap scope. It took about five shots from my Remington 1100 slug gun with 2-3/4" shells to break the cross hair in my old Traditional Redfield scope.
Was your scope a shotgun scope or a rifle scope? Just curious.... What was the objective of it?
Not trying to bust any balls here but old and cheap scopes just break on their own as it's just a matter of when.
Gotcha, was just wondering if e scope was a "shotgun" scope or a rifle scope. Always heard non shotgun scopes wouldn't last due too the recoil difference.... Smaller reticle was more beefier so too speak too withstand it from my understanding....
'J' my comment wasn't aimed at you. I don't hold any truth in non shotgun not holding up to heavy recoil. I'm sure a 375 H&H or 416 Rem Mag or any of the big magnum rifles will be harder on a scope that a shotgun.
I have a custom Rem 700 in 375 H&H that weights 6.5 lbs empty with a Leupold compact scope that holds up fine. The rifle does have a spring loaded recoil pad and muzzle break and recoils less than a 30-06 but still the shock is there before it gets to the recoil pad and is dampened .
Now magnum pistols are rough on scopes and only handgun scope I would trust 20-25 yrs ago was a Burris. Had a Leupold scope fall apart inside on a S&W 41 22LR pistol.
I would much rather nail down a gun like that and make sure it's 100% on before anything else. Practice is always a good idea without something like a lead sled but I am like Brock in that I will make sure I have a good rest when it comes time.