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There our manuals all over the place. Have you check your Library, and have you check the internet . I have seen several places that have that book , check E-Bay also they offer some good scoop books. Your going to have to dig a little for it . If I can remember the places that carry them I will send you a message.
They are used to indicate elevation needed to hit your target at various ranges. The distances should be indicated in your owner's manual. For instance, if calibrated for .223 remington, and sighted in at 100 yards, the first might be 200 yards, the 2nd 300 yards, etc.
It gets condensation from going cold to hot, you can't take them apart without disturbing the seal. The only thing you can do is put it on the radiator and let it warm up, slowly, evenly, not too hot, for about a week. My gps on my bike fogged up and it is in the sun all day, but still won't dry out, so, you are taking a chance. It might not do anything. Hope this helps.
You have to sight it in and then insert the ring for the specific ammunition and distance you are using. From then point on, you can dial in the distance and the cross hairs will be right on. It isn't an actual range finder, it's a bullet drop compensator.
The Leupold VX-II 2-7 X 33 is excellent for the Marlin 1895. Small enough not to unbalance the look of the rifle, plenty of magnification for hunting with the 45-70.
I have one on my 1895 cowboy and I am well satisfied with its performance..
The battery on lighted reticle scopes is located underneath a screw off cap on the rheostat switch usually on the ocular lens housing. Hold the base of the switch with one hand and unscrew the cap with a coin. Replace the battery with a CR2032 button type battery (this is the most common battery size for these)
Hope this helps, Mark the Gunsmith
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