As u can see the bell is in the way...these are really high profile mounts and needed to be this high just to clear the sight...LOL.......I would imagine any scope would be similar....good luck
BTW, someone was, again, asking how to adjust the quattro trigger.....1) Loosen the tiny little allen behind the trigger all the way. 2) loosen the allen, which is closest to and in front of the trigger, two complete turns. 3) Tighten the allen, which is furthest forward on the trigger blade as tight as you can. 4) Make sure the safety still works. 5) Go back to step two and, unless you want to take the gun apart, mess with that screw all you want. 6) MAKE SURE THE SAFETY STILL WORKS! Optional: 7) Dismantling the gun and lightly honing both seer faces, so that they are perfectly square with each other, does give Hatsan's shotgun trigger a precision rifle trigger feel...BUT, MAKE SURE THE SAFETY STILL WORKS!
buldawg76, Doesn't the metric screw you mention have an M designation? I would like to replace my Quattro trigger screws..Thanks
buldwag76 Sometimes it's in how you see it and somtimes it's the way you lawyer does. The way I look at the quattro, and I am new to it: The rearmost Allen is intended to adjust the tension on a coil spring, you can fiddle with that all day long and not accomplish anything. Fact is adjusting a 5/8 inch long linear coil spring by an 1/8 of an inch of pretension isn't worth the effort.Both screws, that are located forward of the trigger blade, actually do the same thing to the seer angle......only the tip of one screw has more mechanical advantage than the other.As a result, one of the trigger blade's two allens (AKA: Hex screw) "Sets the seer" the other actually "trips the seer."If I told it to you guys correctly, after the initial rough in, the person new to the quattro should only need to mess around with one screw. And don't use grease where it isn't needed. I already have a box full of $2000 cameras that are junk because nobody wants to take them apart and get the dried up grease out of the lens and shutter.