Yes, you can put a rifle scope on a crossbow if it has a Picatinny or Weaver rail. However, it is not recommended because rifle scopes are designed for faster bullets and longer distances. Crossbow scopes use specialized reticles to match bolt drop and deliver accurate results at closer ranges. […]
Rifle Scope Compatibility
The main difference between a muzzleloader and a rifle is how they are loaded and used. A muzzleloader loads powder and projectile from the muzzle, offering slower reloads and effective ranges of about 100–200 yards. A modern rifle uses cartridges, fires faster, and delivers greater accuracy and longer range. What […]
Yes, you can put a regular rifle scope on an AR-15 if the scope has enough eye relief and uses a compatible mounting system. AR-15 rifles typically require cantilever or extended mounts to achieve proper eye alignment due to the rifle’s flat-top receiver and shooting position. Tools and Setup You […]
Yes, thermal imaging works during the day because it detects heat (infrared radiation), not visible light. Thermal cameras operate independently of daylight and remain highly effective in daytime conditions. They excel at spotting, tracking, and identifying animals or humans, even in thick brush or when targets are camouflaged. How Thermal […]
Yes, Simmons scopes can be used on air rifles, but only airgun-rated models. Simmons ProTarget Air and ProHunter AirGun scopes are built to withstand the dual-recoil of air rifles. Standard Simmons rimfire or centerfire scopes often fail on high-powered spring-piston break-barrel air rifles due to reverse recoil. Understanding Air Rifle […]
Air rifles are hard on scopes because spring-piston air rifles generate a violent double-recoil. The rifle first recoils backward, then snaps sharply forward when the piston slams home. This bidirectional shock stresses scope internals designed for one-directional firearm recoil, often causing reticle, lens, or mount failure. Why air rifles are […]
Scopes sit high on bullpup air rifles to create a proper cheek weld and eye alignment. Bullpup designs place the rail low relative to the shooter’s eye, so higher mounts improve ergonomics, clear large objective lenses, allow magazine access, and support accurate trajectory calculations. Why bullpup rifles need different scope […]
The scope on a scout rifle sits forward of the action to enable fast, both-eyes-open shooting. This position preserves peripheral awareness, keeps the action clear for rapid stripper-clip reloading, improves balance, and prevents the scope from striking the shooter’s brow during recoil. The Origin of the Forward Mounted Scope The […]