Originally Posted by Lee24
If you had read the post ( I know, none of you do that before shooting off at the mouth ), you would see where I said I do not use the 25-yard system. I can sight in any decent rifle at any shootable range with 3 shots:

First to see where it is hitting, like at 100 meters.
Second to move the windage and elevation to center
Third to check it at a farther range.

The question was about how to sight in at 25 yards.
You have to be able to estimate range within 10 yards at 300 and be able to hold 1 MOA without a bench to do it in 3 shots.

If your parents ever let you buy a real rifle, start with the 25-yard method.


This best explains your problem...

"Delusional disorder is a psychiatric diagnosis denoting a psychotic mental disorder that is characterized by holding one or more non-bizarre delusions[1] in the absence of any other significant psychopathology. Non-bizarre delusions are fixed beliefs that are certainly and definitely false, but that could possibly be plausible, for example, someone who thinks he or she is under police surveillance. In order for the diagnosis to be made auditory and visual hallucinations cannot be prominent, although olfactory or tactile hallucinations related to the content of the delusion may be present.[2] To be diagnosed with delusional disorder, the delusion or delusions cannot be due to the effects of a drug, medication, or general medical condition, and delusional disorder cannot be diagnosed in an individual previously diagnosed with schizophrenia. A person with delusional disorder may be high functioning in daily life and may not exhibit odd or bizarre behavior aside from these delusions. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) defines six subtypes of the disorder characterized as erotomanic, grandiose, jealous, persecutory, somatic, and mixed, i.e., having features of more than one subtypes.[2] Delusions also occur as symptoms of many other mental disorders, especially the other psychotic disorders."


To all gunmaker critics-
"It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena.."- Teddy Roosevelt