Guamsst
02-23-2012, 10:52
Zeroed my Romanian PSL at 25yds this weekend. It had rained for 2 days and I didn't feel like laying in the mud to zero the rifle so I figured I'd squat behind the truck and use a rucksack on the tailgate for a rest and atleast get it close to zeroed at 25yds to save time later.
This was not the most stable position and there was a little wobble. First shot hit center and VERY low but atleast was on paper. I then played with the knobs to get the up/down figured out as I don't read Romanian. I set the scope to 0yds and loosened the adjustment screws. Then I took a second shot which was steady and deliberate. It cut the centerline but was still VERY low. So, no windage adjustment needed.
Here's where the "are you kidding me" part comes in. To adjust for elevation I decided to try the method that just never really works. I put the sight on the bullseye then while balancing on my toes squating behind the truck I reached up and turned the turret until the scope was sighted on the bullet hole. I hoped this would get me "close" to where I needed to be. I fired again, BULLSEYE, slightly right. I thought F-me, that didn't really work, so I fired again. BULLSEYE, just a hair left. Had I not fired a shot just to check to see if I was on paper, and had I not fired a second bullseye just to check the first bullseye, I basically would have zeroed the rifle with one shot and a second to confirm it.
I doubt it will ever be so easy again but it sure was nice this time. Now just to get back out and do some serious shooting and see what it can do. So far I'm happy with the results I get with cheap russian ammo. It aint a 1,000yd match rifle but it aint supposed to be either.
This was not the most stable position and there was a little wobble. First shot hit center and VERY low but atleast was on paper. I then played with the knobs to get the up/down figured out as I don't read Romanian. I set the scope to 0yds and loosened the adjustment screws. Then I took a second shot which was steady and deliberate. It cut the centerline but was still VERY low. So, no windage adjustment needed.
Here's where the "are you kidding me" part comes in. To adjust for elevation I decided to try the method that just never really works. I put the sight on the bullseye then while balancing on my toes squating behind the truck I reached up and turned the turret until the scope was sighted on the bullet hole. I hoped this would get me "close" to where I needed to be. I fired again, BULLSEYE, slightly right. I thought F-me, that didn't really work, so I fired again. BULLSEYE, just a hair left. Had I not fired a shot just to check to see if I was on paper, and had I not fired a second bullseye just to check the first bullseye, I basically would have zeroed the rifle with one shot and a second to confirm it.
I doubt it will ever be so easy again but it sure was nice this time. Now just to get back out and do some serious shooting and see what it can do. So far I'm happy with the results I get with cheap russian ammo. It aint a 1,000yd match rifle but it aint supposed to be either.