I ended up taking the scope off my RB, I guess because of the nature of handguns.... if I need an optic, I should be using a rifle. I still have it hanging out if I should ever get the hankering to scope another handgun....
Now the reason I am posting this is to report a problem that I had, had posted about, but I believe that it belongs in a sticky because in my searches on the internet, it had proved to be a problem for other RB owners, as well as super redhawk owners in .454 casull. The problem stemmed from using CCI450 small rifle magnum primers, and the firing pin not being able to reliably ignite their hard primer cups.
The easy solution came from a GB member here trotterlg (larry) who mentioned that rifles usually had smaller firing pin heads than revolvers, because rifle primers are in fact harder and meant to deal with higher pressures. I ended up chucking the firing pin in a drill and slimming down the end (not to a point, just lowering the width), and that worked to stop all misfires and return 100% reliability.
Now after this had already taken place, I was cleaning out the hammer pocket on the frame, and noticed an indent in the pocket where the hammer had been hitting hard enough to actually make a dent in the frame on the right side. I also noticed that the firing pin had quite a bit more projection when pushing on the transfer bar than when the hammer was down, meaning the hammer was keeping itself from longer contact with the transfer bar and less energy put into the firing pin. I shaved down the foot on the hammer just a slight bit as to make it so there was better contact with the transfer bar, but kept it to a minimum so the transfer bar safety system still worked correctly.
Haven't had one misfire since. As I promised on the gunsmithing forum I still have yet to test replacing the firing pin with a factory one to see if just the hammer being modified alone with a factory firing pin can be a solution to the problem.