No one can answer your question unless this is known......
Have you shot it with scope on?
what is MOA adjustment for the scope?
what is the yardage?
Let me know & Ill walk u in.....
Nikon Prostaff is an excellent variable scope for under $250. Excellent optics, can't beat it for the price.
You would have to have 52 clicks of adjustment.
You will want to make your scope point to the right more.
See link below-
There are many places where one can purchase a nikon spotting scope. This includes specialist camera stores, some electronics stores and sites such as Amazon.
Opinons vary. Rule of thumb is to buy the best you can afford. Nikon, Burris, Leopold, Nightforce, Kahles, etc. all make fine optics.
No
1. Using a sandbag, set up your rifle so that it doesn't move around much.2. Aim the air rifle at a target using the iron sights.3. Adjust the windage and elevation of the scope until it is pointing at the target while the iron sights are pointing at the same target.4. Try it out, see what happens. Fire three shot groups and adjust based on the center of this group.
Here's the basics on mounting the scope on a rifle. ( Assuming you have a scope mount on the rifle.) 1. Place the bottom half of the scope rings on the rifle first (Without the scope attached.) 2. Place the scope on the bottom half of the rings and adjust the scope mounts to comfortably fit your eye. When adjusted, tighten down the bottom half of scope rings to the rifle mount. ( The scope should have one cross hair adjustment at the top and one on the right.) 3. Place the scope in the rings and then put the top half of the rings on. Tighten them down, but not VICE tight, just loose. You still want to move the scope some. 4. Look through the scope and align the cross hairs level with the rifle barrel. The Vertical line should be straight up and down at a right angle with the barrel. 5. when you have the scope adjusted to your eye and the barrel of the rifle, tighten the top scope rings in a crisscross pattern a little at a time. Don't vice one down then go to the next one. Do it a few turns on each one until they are tight. A final note. If you have a small screw hole and screw at the back end of the scope mount (on the rifle) you may want to place the rear scope ring against that screw. This is a scope stop. This will keep the scope from moving back from the recoil. Some scope mounts have a long pad at the rear of the scope mount that acts the same way. It's usually necessary on high powered rifles not 22's.
On the bottom of the windage / elevation housing.
The BSA Sweet 17 rifle scope is an affordable scope that's designed for beginning rifle users. Average prices on the scope range from $50.00 to $100.00 in most cases.
I have one on my .44 mag and so far it works fine. A .44 mag rifle doesn't recoil as much as a 30-06 though. Also there's the issue of parralax. The Nikon is set for 50 yards where the '06 really needs a scope set for at least 100-200 yards to take full advantage of it's capabilities. If all your shots are 50 yards or less try it. It's a 50/50 proposition