I guess I never said this enough! NEVER SHOOT A NEW SPRING GUN WITH A SCOPE ON IT! Cause they will fall apart most of the time, or worse they will seem fine and then they will shift zero every other time you shoot the gun.
You are not a fool, cause you will learn form this mistake. Even the very best tuned gun can kill the best of scopes. In fact, I would say that any high powered spring piston gun will kill any rifle scope, made for it or not! It is only a matter of time. Some will last for years, other for hours, and some for 4 shots.....
Jim
If "springers" really are as tough to shoot as Jim suggests above, one wonders how we managed to hit what we were aiming at back in the day when the hottest thing going in a small game hunting air rifle was the FWB 124/127?
In nearly thirty years of shooting adult air rifles and hunting with them, I've only had one scope failure on a spring-piston air rifle -a Gamo Shadow that ate up a Simmons Pro-Air optic that was SUPPOSED to be "airgun rated" and cost more than the rifle did. That rifle totally destroyed that scope in less than 50 shots.
Not wishing to have my weeked of shooting interrupted, I made my way down the mountain from the family hunting camp on the border of the San Bernardino National Forest to the town of Hesperia, where, for the princely sum of $69.99, I purchased a Bushnell Sportsman 4-12 A.O. from Wal Mart. I went back up the hill, sighted the rifle in for maximum point blank range with Kodiaks, and I haven't touched the scope adjustment since.
That rifle, by the way, is well over the 15,000 shot mark on its original mainspring and seal.
When I bought my wife a Shadow, we used the same Wal Mart scope on hers as I used on mine, from the get-go. No issues with hers, either, several thousand shots later.
When I traded off my .20 R-1 for the smaller, lighter, .20 R-9, I mounted the same Wal Mart scope to it, too, before discharging the first shot. It is also over the 10,000 shot mark now, and I haven't messed with the elevation or windage since sighting the thing for max PBR with Beemn FTS pellets.
My .177 Goldfinger came with a Banner. That scope now resides on my Ruger 10/22 which I hardly ever shoot. It functions fine. In its place on the Goldfinger, I mounted the same Wal Mart scope that I use on all of my air rifles now -the Bushnell Sportsman 4-12 A.O. from Wal Mart. 12 tins of pellets later, it is still going strong.
I used that same model of scope on a .20 Crusader, too, with equally positive results.
Oh, and the 66R on my old R-1 outlasted two mainsprings and is STILL trouble-free for the current owner.
So yeah, springers can wreck scopes. Dosen't mean they automatically will. Whenever I've used scopes that were properly double-braced to handle bi-directional recoil and have a sufficiently stout erector mechanism, I've not had any issues with inconsistant zero on my spring-piston guns.
-JP