Thanks for the comments.
bluebayou,
This is one of my oddest set-ups. The front mount is made up of an aluminum bolck base (the next version may be steel, I already have an idea for it) , that is dovetailed into the barrel, with another, perpendicular dovetail used to mount a standard 7/8" rimfire scope ring onto. I ran ideas through my mind like you wouldn't believe. Many of them are better than this one, but I didn't have the tools to make it happen. Since the scope is 3/4" and the rings are for 7/8", I filled the gap with a strip of leather. The leather provides a moderate amount of resistance to scope movement, but mostly, it allows enough side to side and vertical movement to not damage the scope. It takes a good bit of effort to slide the scope through the leather, and that's before the ring is tightened fully. The true test will be how it holds up to recoil, but I do not expect any issues to arise. The rear ring is one of the original supplied, but highly modifyied, by me, and it holds the scope very tightly. I expect the rear to keep it all together.
I may yet remove the modifyied scope base under the rear mount to lower it about 1/2", and make or change the front lower as well. This may help with the cheek weld issue, but I'm thinking very seriously of using a std handi monte carlo style stock.
Quick,
Once I figured out how I wanted to do it, it hasn't been too hard to make them. I posted pics earlier on making the rear mount pattern on paper and transfered it to the steel. Once I did this it was a matter of laborious cutting, grinding and filing. Then heating and bending it to shape.
At present time, there is no windage adjustment except for moving the front mount in the dovetail, that just to get it zeroed in. I've got a few ideas on making a front windage base, but nothing concrete as yet.
The current set-up has the posibility of windage in the rear, but only if I keep the altered scope base. I might just settle for old Kentucky windage.