I bought the cheapest one walmart sells, that fit multipule calibers. And I love it. I put the sight in target on the back wall of my garage, and that way I can still see the dot in bright times of the day. I've used it on my 22, 223, 17hmr, .410, 303, 7.62x54, and my 50 cal. muzzle loader. I believe they are worth the money, as long as you take your time making sure you have the right adapter, its in your barrel snugley. Most of the time I was 4 shots away from being dead on.
2006-08-20 01:34:25
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answer #1
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answered by uncle doh 1
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All this will do is get you CLOSE. You need to still ZERO in your optics.
If you go with the bullet types you have to buy one laser for each bore gun you have, this can get VERY expensive.
I personally use the type that goes in the end of the bbl. And once I get my opticss zeroed. I reinsert the laser and see where I am. I mark this in a note book, so the next time I use that gun I can CHECK my zero
2006-08-20 02:12:45
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answer #2
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answered by Maxwell Smart(ypants) 7
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Boresighters don't zero rifle scopes. They align them enough so that you can zero them. Bass Pro Shops sells a mechanical boresighter that I use. I costs $50, I think.
2006-08-20 08:21:25
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answer #3
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answered by desotobrave 6
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I laser boresighted my Knight Muzzleloader. Then I shot it at 25 yards to work out how close it replaced into. I shot on the tip of a spent 12 GA shell. i presumed I neglected the paper and my first theory replaced into this replaced right into a waste of time. once I walked as much as the paper I observed I hit lifeless bullseye on the shell. The Boresighter replaced into great to have. i could propose procuring one although as a replace of having a save do it. I rather have boresighted 5 weapons so the boresighter payed for itself. basically undergo in techniques you boresight and shoot close first, get left and suitable then complication on the subject of the area.
2016-12-17 13:57:33
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answer #4
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answered by ussery 4
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I use the type that goes in the end of the barrel, works very well for me in all the calibers I've used it in. Still have to fine tune the zero.
2006-08-20 05:00:33
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answer #5
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answered by Lancer 3
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All bore sighters work to the point that they get you on the paper..You're still going to have to zero in your rifle/scope..
I have a BSA bore sighter, it works well for some firearms and not so well with others, it depends on the rifle/scope combination..
2006-08-19 23:44:54
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answer #6
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answered by jack 7
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On some guns(.17HMR, 204 Ruger,22LR & Mag) you might need the one that goes into the end of the barrel.
I have used both and they have worked equally well.
I was on the paper at 50 or 100 yards
2006-08-20 07:32:56
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I prefer the bullet type keep it near to me that way if your on the move and it drops off you can retrive it faster never has tho but heard of it happening
2006-08-19 22:07:03
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answer #8
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answered by Paul G 5
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my uncle tried on a 30-06 and it was way off, before he went out hunting he had to spend an hour on the bench sighting it in on paper
2006-08-21 17:23:00
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answer #9
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answered by NASCAR fan 8_17_20_99 3
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Sure but you still need to "ZERO".
2006-08-19 22:04:12
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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