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If I remember correctly, changing the elevation does move the sights a little on a Kar98’s scope.
I could be wrong, thought.
It’s not like we need a four-episode spanning hostage situation.
But I think the aforementioned little girls could handle a small dose of that specific reality.
The “not everybody will like you when you’re in charge” reality.
It is the young ones who especially need to be taught on how hostile the world is.
“I don’t want this to be for young girls anymore.”
Just showing, if you were curious.
Is this supporting my statements or offering some other example. I’ve never seen the k98 scope first hand but I’d assume it’s poi correcting the same way.
WW2 scopes aren’t much different. The optics are structured mostly the same. Because you are moving a lense set when adjusting it, the poi changes without the crosshairs shifting. Actually, the last WW2 scope I saw had external adjustments on the mounts.
Guess using WW2 scopes as sources is not good anymore, is it?
As someone who has actually used scopes, nope. The mechanics of a scope are designed so the whole optical fov shifts inside the case.
When zeroed the dot or crosshair stays put, but the effective and actual poi shifts.
Unless I’m mistaken, changing the altitude and windage moves the dot from the center of the scope, so no, he’s not zeroed in.
The target is obviously at the zeroed distance with no wind. :I
“You prancin’ show ponies.”
Fucking casuals.