Sorry I've been neglecting this thread, I've been chasing electrical gremlins through the house for the past few days.
The vee-block is a very good idea, that's why
I considered it early on!
Unfortunately, the indicating point is the trunnion rimbase. The rimbases are very narrow, just enough room on the very top (where it is widest, about 3/8") for a single point of contact. The rimbase narrows quickly, and is only about 1/16" wide at its narrowest (the centerline). I felt that there simply wasn't enough contact area on the rimbase for the vee-block.
The tailhook does a decent job. Most of my rantings about it were simply frustration. And the fact that it was all my fault didn't help.
Confession time:
The tailhook was supposed to be made of 1/4" brass rod, and adjustable. It is neither.
The piece of rod that I had which was supposed to be 1/4" in diameter, turned out to be an odd size that I mistook to be 5mm. No problem, a 13/64" drill would be close enough.
Except that it wasn't 5mm. It was .204" (yeah,
now you measure...)
It would start in the drilled hole about 1/2" and go no deeper. So I got the (again) bright idea to cut a chisel point on the rod and spin it down into the hole.
Hmm, still tight, lets do it again. Still a little too snug, one more time.
Perfe... squeeeeeeeak!!! Oh, crap...
So now I had a piece of pretty brass rod, that is neither 1/4" nor 5mm, permanetly friction-welded into my baseplate.
Nothing to do but bend it and cut it off, and hope I got it in the right place. Fortunately, I did manage to bend the tailhook correctly, so that it positions the leveling leg on the rimbase. I even installed the hidden setscrew that I so carefully designed, for what that's worth. It ain't doing anything, but it will keep the screw from getting lost.
And it works, it catches the rear face of the cascabel securely and positions the baseplate accurately.
But it isn't what I wanted, hence the frustration.
When I get another piece of rod, I plan to drill out the oddball piece (that's the only way to get it out) and redo the tailhook. It may not work any better, but it will give me the last laugh.
Next up is to machine an adapter so that I can use my laser as a boresighter. FWIW the little red laser isn't going to be of much use outdoors past the 25 yard range, it just isn't bright enough. Depending on how it performs (or doesn't) during the boresighting, it may or may not make it back onto the scope base.