Author Topic: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem  (Read 8920 times)

Offline longislandhunter

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 8204
    • http://
RE: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem--NOT SOLVED!
« Reply #15 on: January 10, 2009, 09:39:37 AM »
Interesting,,,, first time it was shooting low and right,,,, now it's shooting high and left,,,,,,  I think you've discovered the problem.  I've never dealt with them but I've always heard that Crosman is very good about warranty, repairs and that sort of customer service thing.  Let us know how it turns out.  At least you found out the problem......

Jeff
\"If it was easy it wouldn\'t be hunting, it would be shopping.\"

Offline bearded_spock

  • GTA Donations
  • ******
  • Posts: 28
    • http://
Re: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem
« Reply #16 on: January 10, 2009, 11:11:43 AM »
I had a similar problem with my RS2 and the Leapers 3-9X32 AO scope that I put on it.  I found that my groups would get farther low and left the longer I shot until they ended up  1" low and 1" left at 25 yards.  When I'd give up for the day and then come back out the next day (or later the same day)  it would be spot on at first and then got low-left again.  If I adjusted for the low-left POI then when I would come back out the next time I would be shooting high-right for a while.  It finally dawned on me that it was a 70 ° day when I zeroed and on the days that I saw the shift it was in the 30s.  After being inside for a while the scope would warm back up and shoot the original POI.  I checked the forums here and found several references to shifting POI with temperature.  If if Crosman used the Centerpoint scope in that combo then its possible that it might be the same thing.  I see that you're shooting indoors and I haven't done any testing to see how dramatic the temperature change needs to be to cause the POI shift, but temperature might be something worth checking.
Anything worth doing almost always requires more effort than its worth.

Offline gamo2hammerli

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 6261
    • http://
Re: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem
« Reply #17 on: January 12, 2009, 05:02:23 AM »
Welcome to the GTA forum kkoenning and bearded_spock.  You beat me to it, I was thinking of temperature changes also.  Not only that, I've read a thread about how you lay the gun down...ie. left or right side can also affect POI...strange huh?  I had the POI change on my Gamo Viper a few months ago.....one night I was shooting 1/4" dots 8 out of 10 times at 10 meter distance all night.  Next morning (Less than 6 hours in between)  I went down to the basement to shoot again....I couldn't believe it....all my shots were 1/2" low.  Nothing moved...I checked all the marks on the scope and scope mount.  So I had to "click" the elevation knob about 20 times to get back on target.  After that everything's fine.  I think in my case it was the gun settling down.  Hope that's the case for you as well kkoenning.  Or maybe it is the scope's fault.
Gamo: Expotec .177 + Big Cat .177 + Viper .177 + Whisper .177, Hammerli Titan .177, Diana model 24 .177, RWS-Diana P5 Magnum pistol .177, Crosman: G1 Extreme .177 + Storm XT .177 + Sierra Pro .177 + 1377 pistol .177, Air Arms S410SL .22, BSA Scorpion T10 .22, FX Cyclone .177, Remington Air Master 77 .177 + BB\'s,

Offline tjk

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2275
    • http://
Re: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem
« Reply #18 on: January 12, 2009, 07:47:29 AM »
After reading through the various replies, my money would be on the ambient temp affecting your scope. When I take my rifles outside to shoot, I usually lay them on a beach towel on top of the picnic table. Then I walk away and let it sit for a while and give the scope time to aclimate itself to the outside temps. Sometimes I'll even 'flip it over' and let it lay for a little longer if the inside and outside temps are really different. This Is a great time to grab a cold one out of the fridge, play with the dogs,.....feed the dogs, take a load of trash out, etc.......you get the picture. It took me a long time for me to realize this little trick, but the results have been alot better than before. If your Summit came with the same "Crosman" ( Relabelled Center-Point), that my SP came with then I wouldn't exchange it for another one just yet. Their pretty good scopes for a "combo'd" rig. If anything, I'd try another one piece mount and see how things go. I had to get an adjustable mount to keep my scope rets centered in the scope, then I only had to give it a few clicks to get her zeroed. But give the "let her rest" method a try and see if things turn out better,....I hope they do!!!,  tjk :emoticon:
397 Benji-98\' model    
Marksman  0035, My Fav!,CDT T\'d
Crosman Sierra-Pro,.177
Benji 392 08\'
CDT TT\'d RWS 34 .22,CP 4-16X40 AO
MM T\'d Marksman 0035
Crosman G1 Extreme
Daisy PowerLine 1000
TF-97 .22
B-28A MM T\'d
B-28 OEM Tuned by me
Beeman .22 RX-2 w/Theoben GR
Beeman .177 R1 Santa Rosa

Offline kkoenning

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Posts: 64
    • http://
RE: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem--NOT SOLVED!
« Reply #19 on: January 12, 2009, 11:42:49 AM »
I called Crosman this morning. They told me to send the scope in and they will replace it. So, I boxed up the scope and took it to the UPS store. Now I just have to wait for the replacement.

Offline Bentong

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 837
    • http://
RE: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem
« Reply #20 on: January 13, 2009, 10:53:02 AM »
Quote
kkoenning - 1/7/2009  9:10 AM

Yes, it is the stock scope. It is a crosman 3-9 x 40 AO and it uses a one-piece mount. Four cap screws are used to clamp onto the dovetail and four cap screws (smaller) on each ring. The stop pin is screwed down into the stop pin hole in the gun.

If the scope is moving, is it likely to be slipping to the rear or front? (I am a newbie--hope this is not a "dumb" question.)

I will have to remove the scope to see if the stop pin has slipped or did not hold its position.

Visual inspection (without removing anything) does not seem to indicate slippage. Perhaps the scope is failing?


When mounting a scope don't discount the fact that it needs to be plumbed as any variance will throw your shoots side to side and when mounting read on proper install > http://www.pyramydair.com/site/articles/scopes-part2/ :)

Offline Progun

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 865
    • http://comcast
Re: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem
« Reply #21 on: January 13, 2009, 01:12:24 PM »
Hey Keith, Dealing with these Gremlins keeps the pellet makers in business it seems.Been there, done that. A new scope mount would be on my wish list if I were you. You may be using so much of your scopes adjustments to get POA to POI at the '25 ft distance your shooting at that the scope can't hold the reticle firm.It wanders 'cause it's in the "mushy" end of it's adjustment range. An adjustable mount would allow you to compensate for elevation and windage adjustments without adjusting your scopes windage or elevation adjusters.Keeping the scope very near it's optical center will help eliminate it's likelyhood that the scope is the cause for wandering groups.But that temperature thing,definitly for real. Your gun is only" sighted in""for the temperature and conditions you are shooting on that particular day. Zero'd at 75 deg. ain't necessarily Zero'd at 35 deg.Also your gun is still new. Not unusual to need several hundred shots for the gun to wear in and stabilize.Also, believe it or not, you might benefit from a barrel cleaning.Some guns do.Good luck with your replacement scope and if the same old problems persist, get a better scope and mount.

Offline kkoenning

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Posts: 64
    • http://
RE: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem--Scope arrived
« Reply #22 on: January 22, 2009, 11:44:21 AM »
Replacement scope arrived today. Total time was 10 days (8 business days). Pretty good!

I installed today and will zero it in tomorrow. I'll let you know how it goes.

Offline kkoenning

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Posts: 64
    • http://
RE: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem--Replacement scope zeroed
« Reply #23 on: January 30, 2009, 08:14:17 AM »
Replacement scope is zeroed and have maybe 50 or 60 shots through it.

Seems to be holding--so far. I will post if I have any problems with the replacement scope.

Offline brokenarrowjbe

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 381
    • http://
Re: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem
« Reply #24 on: January 30, 2009, 02:00:30 PM »
Agree with progun, get drooper mounts or adjustable mounts, try to start with scope as near center optically as possble. John
Chance favors the well prepared

Offline kkoenning

  • Jr. Member
  • **
  • Posts: 64
    • http://
RE: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem--Replacement scope problem.
« Reply #25 on: February 08, 2009, 03:02:27 PM »
Friday my shots were low and right just like with the original scope--maybe a total of 100 shots now. According to the marks on the scope tube and the receiver, scope has not moved. Zeroed and shooting in the basement with constant temperature. I have re-zeroed but I expect it will change again.

Maybe I can try some adjustable mounts--anyone have any suggestions for affordable adjustable mounts?

Any suggestions for a reasonably priced ($60 - $70) scope that is known to be reliable on springers? Guess the Center Point supplied with the Summit just cannot handle the recoil of this springer!

Thanks in advance for any suggestions.

Offline tjk

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2275
    • http://
Re: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem
« Reply #26 on: February 09, 2009, 12:01:29 AM »
Keith, is your rifle tuned yet?!? If not, you'd be well advised to make the investment on one. A real good Adj. mount is the Beeman 5039 model,....made by the Sports Match company. It's pricey, but very solid and reliable. That scope you have is quite adequate, but the re-coil of an untuned springer will cause just about any shooter to have doubts in his scope!!!! LOL's Have you installed a GRT-III trigger on your rifle?!?!? That will cut your accuracy issues in half even without a tune!!!! Good Luck. tjk
397 Benji-98\' model    
Marksman  0035, My Fav!,CDT T\'d
Crosman Sierra-Pro,.177
Benji 392 08\'
CDT TT\'d RWS 34 .22,CP 4-16X40 AO
MM T\'d Marksman 0035
Crosman G1 Extreme
Daisy PowerLine 1000
TF-97 .22
B-28A MM T\'d
B-28 OEM Tuned by me
Beeman .22 RX-2 w/Theoben GR
Beeman .177 R1 Santa Rosa

Offline 70GTvert

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 273
    • http://www.cardomain.com/ride/566960
Re: Remington Summit--puzzling accuracy problem
« Reply #27 on: February 09, 2009, 12:38:00 AM »
Wow, lots of thoughts on what could be doing this, but what about this? How many times do we put our cheek down on the stock in the EXACT same spot? I found that a lot of unexplained POI changes came not from defective equipment but from me! Mark the stock for a cheek rest, zero in to that, and then see if using that same spot, EXACTLY the same spot, each time, results in better POI. It has been my experience defective equipment POI changes are not as perfect, resulting in scattered hits rather than just moved groupings.
I came into this world with nothing, and I still have most of it left!