I’m new to RDS. What’s the most effective way to zero the dot?
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This ^^^^^If it were me, I first line it up as close as possible to my irons at home to get on paper. Then go to the range and shoot it unsupported 2 hand standing. 3 shot groups at 10 yards until its close to centered.
Many of those laser boresighters are serious crap-- they change position every time you turn it on, so they are not centered or parallel with the bore.Alternately you could get a bore laser, pick a distance, and align the dots.
Very good point. If you aren't able to shoot decently consistent groups at whatever yardage it's a futile effort because you'll just be chasing a moving target, so to speak. I would try to get at least to 10y if possible. If decent grouping is really non-existent for a shooter at this point in their skill development, personally I would suggest not adjusting anything on a new dot since the factory zero will probably be better anyway. Or else have someone else zero it to get it close enough to start with.Skill level and mastery of fundamentals will really determine how well this goes if you are zeroing unsupported
That makes two of us. I don't get the results, in terms of precision, that I would expect from a rest. Since I started building pistols, I figured I'd get a "GOOD" quality pistol rest for zeroing a pistol. So, I spent some $$. And got the compact rest from CTK Precision. It is a very nice "bit of kit." Very adjustable.I am probably an odd duck here but I hate zeroing pistols from a rest, mainly because I get awful results compared to just freehanding it. I probably don't know how to do it right.
Very nice. Looks quality and functional!That makes two of us. I don't get the results, in terms of precision, that I would expect from a rest. Since I started building pistols, I figured I'd get a "GOOD" quality pistol rest for zeroing a pistol. So, I spent some $$. And got the compact rest from CTK Precision. It is a very nice "bit of kit." Very adjustable.
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I've used it many times with mixed results. From what I could tell, the LIGHTER my grip on the gun, the better. But, like you, I'd love to hear about any specific techniques to maximize the precision for consistent results.
Sorry for the thread drift.
This is what I do too.If it were me, I first line it up as close as possible to my irons at home to get on paper. Then go to the range and shoot it unsupported 2 hand standing. 3 shot groups at 10 yards until its close to centered. Then go to 25y to dial in moving up to 10 shot groups once it looks ok with 3 and 5 shot groups. If I finish with at least 7 of 10 10rings I'm satisfied enough to carry it. Will adjust in subsequent outings if something is off, like maybe my shooting was a little off on zero day. When I can get out to a 50y range I will tweak them a little further, mainly for windage.
In my experience though, those Holosuns new from box should be pretty close at 25y already provided the mounting system is good.
Agreed. I shoot Action Pistol matches and I sight my DeltaPoint equipped G34.5 to impact dead center at 25 yards for longer shots in matches. Twenty five yards allows me to fine tune my POI. That same sight adjustment will blow the center out of a 3” dot at ten yards. Suarez is right. 😉First, adjust the dot so it sits right atop the front sight when the iron sights are aligned.
Then zero your dot at 10 yards while completely ignoring your iron sights.
Per Gabe Suarez:
With a 10 yard zero using most full powered ammo, [red dot] sights are good for face shots from contact distance out to 25 yards, and body shots out from that regardless of the ammunition type or bullet weight.
If you can get the tool to point at the same spot every time you insert it, you got lucky. Test it against your iron sights , take it out, reinsert it and see if it's close - or if it points to a different spot each time.I use a laser bore sight, the sightmark lasers are bore sights you chamber like a round so the display down the barrel. I like that better than the universal options you stick in the end of the barrel. Batteries for the bore sight are cheaper than ammo!
🍀!Zero is only good at supported, controlled, rest, using ammo you zero with, and at a set distance.
Once you shoot unsupported, free hand, many variables come into play, including lighting, body position, and your heart rate. You can get to the point where you are "chasing the zero" and getting silly with it. It's good to understand what you are doing, and the purpose you are doing it for.
If you can get the tool to point at the same spot every time you insert it, you got lucky. Test it against your iron sights , take it out, reinsert it and see if it's close - or if it points to a different spot each time.
Why is a handgun different, or harder? Same exact (physics) principles apply. Don't overthink it.Sighting a rifle is much easier, requires nothing IMO. Easy to shoot from a rest, to properly align sights is just short of idiot proof with 4 points of contact including your cheek weld.
Even if you're not on paper, as long as you can see the dust then you should be able to get on paper pretty fast.