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Nikko Stirling is my best guess and can be from 1956 till today
And without getting my grubies on it all I can suggest is to search every Nikko scope until you narrow down the choices
I have 2 from the 1980's one has a serial number below the windage turret mount on the tube the other doesn't
Measure the objective bell to help with the search
None of them as it is to low a magnification to get a precise range from
the only way to check is to measure out distances to targets at the ranges on the side wheel and decide
I couldn't find the eurohunter model, but I checked out the website. Without a bore sighter, You can still get your scope to hit a paper plate at 100 yards by using a cardboard box. Then it will fine tune in just a few rounds. Only a bolt action though, you have to be able to see down the bore. Take a big box, or a rifle vise, cut some V's into the top edges, lay the rifle in there, pull out the bolt, find a target 100 yards away, put the bore of the rifle on it and don't move the rifle. Then put the crosshairs of the scope on the same target, check to make sure the rifle didn't move, then check the cross hairs again. You will be able to hit your target at 100 yrds, the ar 15 is an exception to the bolt action, you can see down the bore.
the nikko stirling scope like most scopes has rubber "O" rings in them and they can go very tight on you at times all you can do is keep twisting it back and for till it frees off (it will in time) a splash of wd 40 mat free it off as well, but not very much if it gets inside the scope its finished
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