Depends on the tube diameter and profile of your weapon.
Would depend on the gun and size scope tube. The tube would be either 1" or 30mm. Could be side mount top mount etc...More info needed
It all depends on the Daisy Scope rings that you have. The M4 has a removable front and rear sight. This will allow you to add a scope to the Weaver rail mount on the M4 if your scope rings are the weaver size. If not, then you need to purchase weaver scope rings for your scope.
50mm at least.I have found that with a 50mm objective you will need a minimum of high scope rings.Most medium hight scope rings will not give you the clearance needed for a 50mm scope objective.
weaver refers to the type of scope mounts the scope uses. a weaver scope can mount on any rail size.
Check the scope mount makers web sites or call Remington.
depends on the rifle and the scope. Most scopes will use 1 inch rings for that type rifle.
If you want to mount the scope directly to the barrel grooves you will need a 926587Redfield 1" Tip-Off Ring Mount 3/8" Grooved Receiver Matte Medium These are available at midway.com make sure you get the correct size rings to mount to your scope usually 1" Dia. You may need the tip off ring to be higher to clear the barrel mounted sight and the safety. The one above worked just fine on my wife's Springfield 187N. There's not a lot of info. out there on mounts for the Springfield/Savage line
While anything is possible,why would you want to use a scope of that power and objective size on a .22 cal.rifle?If your receiver has a built in 3/8in receiver rail then you may be hard pressed to find rings of the significant height to mount a scope of that size.I would recommend that you get a scope of 4X power.That is all that is needed for the maximum affect range of a .22cal rifle.
"Weaver" is a certain size rail that is skinny at the bottom, and thicker at the top. It is the standard mount for most Red dot sights and scope rings. There are also hand-grips, flashlights, lasers, range finders and grenade launchers that fit these rails.
The industry standard for scope mounts is the 6-48 screw. This is an oddball size due to the fact that it is only used for that application. Brownells is one source for such screws and related tooling. Larger magnum builders have opted for the 8-40 size, however, to stand up better to the rigors of the magnum recoil.
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Magnitude- overall scope in size.