The Proof is in the Pudding, or Questioning Your Sanity
With my new red dot site installed, I was confident that my old, outdated, obsolete 1911 was given a new lease on life and ready for the 21st Century. I stepped out back to my shooting range and set up the gun on sandbags for the initial fire-sighting and testing. After a few rounds of proof-checking and working the gun in, I was reasonably confident that my gun was zero’d to the ammo I was using, and began running my gun through its paces.
Now, have any of you ever had the zero on your optic walk? It’s a frustrating, mind-boggling experience that leaves you dazed and questioning your ability with a firearm. After all, if the optic is saying you’re on center of mass and the bullet actually hits somewhere in Tahiti, something’s seriously wrong with your shooting.
Two magazines and a lot of self doubt later, I began to realize that it wasn’t my shooting that was the culprit here, but the optic’s dot moving around.
I checked and rechecked the set screws and they were tight each time. Never the less, I vowed to make extra sure and got out the Red Loctite, set the zero again, then loctited the set screws in place, and resolved to leave it to dry for 24 hours before I retested. After that period of time, I tested the screws and was absolutely certain that those bad boys weren’t going anywhere.
With the gun loaded for bear and a deep burning desire to show this thing who’s boss, I set up again with a fresh target and took a couple of practice swings. Dead nuts zero, and not moving at all. Victory, I thought. Second magazine in, though, my heart sank as I watched my perfect laser-guided groups begin to open up and walk around again. Again I checked the screws, and again everything was tight as it should be.
Round Two
To be fair to Burris, their customer service was outstanding. I explained the situation and they were kind and helpful, and offered to replace the optic. I obliged after going through all of the steps to make sure that yes, the optic was tightly secured to the gun, and no,the set screws weren’t, in fact, moving.
I received my replacement optic and mounted it up, going through the same procedure to zero, using blue loctite this time to allow me to unscrew and adjust the laser. After a few hours to let the blue loctite set, another box of ammo in hand, I set out to again do some benchmark testing. First mag down, optic zero’d, the gun and optic worked as I expected them to.
Imagine my disappointment when, on Mag 4, using my standard range loads*, the optic began again to wander its zero. Once again, I checked everything twice and double-checked how it was set up on the gun. Once again, everything was where it should be and tight and torqued down.
Bottom Line
Another call to Burris, and they accepted both the replacement and the original back with a full refund to me for the purchase price, since I figured going through the process of replacing optic after optic was a waste of time when I could move up to a higher end device and save myself the trouble.
Asking around, I found that of the people that I knew that used the Burris option, all of them did so on .22s, where they had no issues whatsoever. My conclusion, then, was that unfortunately the optic was just not built to take a higher caliber gun and its recoil.
All of that said, this optic well and truly earned a D-. While I would call it a straight F given its uselessness for any handgun or rifle of sufficient caliber, this optic does still function well for .22s and given the price, is cheap enough to be attractive for use on a .22 target pistol for someone just starting out, so there’s that. Hopefully the Trijicon, Leupold, JPoint, and DROptic function better.
Stay Safe and Shoot Straight.
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* As some of you may know, I have a penchant for self abuse. MOST of my loads, then, for the .45 ACP start at +P and go up. However, I realize that the majority of shooters aren’t so masochistic, so for the purposes of testing, my range loads are, actually, very nice and gentle, a good 780 FPS in .45 ACP.











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