Big6X6,
You had some scary info on my RWS 52 with the C-mount. I have been previously happy with the open sites on my RWS 52 and decided about 2 years ago to put on a scope to help me see the house sparrows in the thick foliage near my house so that I don't hit legitimate song birds by accident, and also to take out the crows at 100 yards. I had read that the German pellet rifles were designed to be used with open sites, and they mentioned the "Droop" factor you had brought up.
As this rifle is now only used for pest control, of .22 caliber, it has a BSA, 4 power scope with an adjustable focus feature on the bell, a C-mount and select pellets that shoot well in the gun. Lately, I have been missing the crows big time, both at 50 and around 100 yards respectably! :eek: I keep bench checking the rifle at 20 feet and it shoots great, but man, I keep missing the crows, it seems that I am coming close, but still no hits, even with a bench rest, or off hand. The mounting screws are rock solid tight. I am a long term member at a gun club and my shooting is above average with my other rifles in skill, so I don't think it is me. Because I shoot from a height, there is no real trajectory drop problems to deal with, if it was from a level plain from point A to point B, then yes these pellet rifles really have parameter drop.
I had no idea that the C-mounts were garbage, it was not cheap, and yes, it does gouge the scope body, as I am now on my second scope with this rifle I saw what it did to my Simmons, as it was later placed on my 30-06. Do you guys have any suggestions? Is my problem the "droop" issue? Should I go back to the open sights for the outer range shots? :?
Thanks.