Why Your Laser Bore Sight Isn't Working: 5 Mistakes That Cost You Time and Ammo

Why Your Laser Bore Sight Isn't Working: 5 Mistakes That  Cost You Time and Ammo

Why Your Laser Bore Sight Isn't Working: 5 Mistakes That Cost You Time and Ammo

You did everything right. You inserted the bore sight, aligned the crosshairs to the dot, and drove to the range feeling confident. Then your first shot missed the paper entirely.

Sound familiar? You're not alone. This is one of the most common frustrations in shooting sports and it almost always comes down to one of five fixable mistakes. None of them are your fault. Nobody explains these things clearly when you buy a bore sight kit.

Let's fix that now.

Mistake #1: You Aligned the Crosshairs Directly on the Laser Dot

This is the number one reason people miss after bore sighting — and it's counterintuitive.

Your scope sits 1.5 to 2.5 inches above the center of your barrel. The laser exits from the barrel center. At 25 yards, these two lines of sight haven't converged yet — which means if you put your crosshairs directly on the laser dot, you'll actually shoot low at the range.

The fix: At 25 yards, set your crosshairs approximately 1 to 1.5 inches above the laser dot not on it. This accounts for the height difference between your bore and your optic. Your shots will land much closer to center when you confirm at the range.

Mistake #2: You Bore Sighted in Bright Sunlight

Even a quality green laser washes out at midday in direct sunlight. If you couldn't see the dot clearly, your alignment was guesswork.

The fix: Bore sight in shade, in a garage, in a basement, or during early morning. The Aeroshot X03 green laser is visible at 50 yards outdoors — but in shade, not direct noon sun. Indoors, it reaches 200 yards. Set up your session where the dot is sharp and unmistakable.

Mistake #3: You Were Holding the Firearm by Hand

Hand tremor — even tiny amounts you can't feel — moves the laser dot several inches at 25 yards. If your firearm moved even slightly while you adjusted your optic, your alignment shifted.

The fix: Always use a stable platform. Shooting bags, a bench rest, or a bipod with the rifle locked steady. The firearm must not move at all between the moment you see the laser dot and the moment you finish adjusting your turrets.

Mistake #4: You Bore Sighted at the Wrong Distance

Many people set their target too close — 10 or 15 feet — or too far — 100 yards. Both cause problems.

  • Too close: Small errors are magnified at range. You might be on paper at 10 feet but 12 inches off at 25 yards.
  • Too far: Most bore sights lose dot clarity beyond 50 yards outdoors, making precise alignment impossible.

The fix:

Firearm type Ideal bore sight distance
Pistol 10–15 yards indoors
Rifle (any caliber) 25 yards
Shotgun 15–20 yards

25 yards is the standard for rifles because it consistently gets you on paper within 2–3 inches at 100 yards.

Mistake #5: You Skipped Live-Fire Confirmation

A bore sight is a starting point not a finish line. It aligns your optic mechanically with your barrel. It does not account for bullet drop, wind, your specific ammunition, or minor inconsistencies in how the laser seats each time.

Every experienced shooter knows: bore sight gets you on paper, live fire gets you zeroed.

The fix: After bore sighting, fire 2–3 rounds at 25 yards. Note where they land relative to your point of aim. Make turret adjustments, then move to 100 yards to finalize your zero. The whole process should take under 20 minutes and fewer than 10 rounds.

One More Thing: Not All Bore Sights Are Equal

Many frustrating experiences come from low-quality bore sights where the laser diode isn't centered in the tool itself. You can test this: place your bore sight on a flat surface and rotate it while pointing the laser at a wall. If the dot draws a circle instead of staying in one spot, the laser is misaligned and the tool cannot be trusted for accurate alignment.

Quality bore sights use precision-centered laser diodes and stainless steel construction to ensure the laser stays true every time you insert and remove the tool.

Quick Reference: Bore Sighting Checklist

Before you start:

  • ✅ Firearm is completely unloaded
  • ✅ Using a stable rest — not holding by hand
  • ✅ Target set at 25 yards (rifles) or 10–15 yards (pistols)
  • ✅ In shade or indoors — not direct sunlight
  • ✅ Correct caliber adapter seated firmly

During alignment:

  • ✅ Set crosshairs 1–1.5 inches above laser dot (not directly on it)
  • ✅ Do not move the firearm while adjusting turrets

After bore sighting:

  • ✅ Remove bore sight before loading
  • ✅ Confirm with 2–3 live rounds at the range
  • ✅ Make final adjustments at your desired zero distance

The Right Tool Makes Every Step Easier

The Aeroshot X03 Laser Bore Sight Kit is built to eliminate the variables that cause these mistakes. The pre-centered green laser diode stays true every insertion. Six precision stainless steel adapters cover .22–.50 cal, 12GA and 20GA with a tool-free, no-slip fit. Daylight-visible at 50 yards outdoors and 200 yards indoors.

Assembled in the USA. Lifetime warranty. Free shipping on orders over $49.

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