The AR Shooter's Secret Weapon For Perfect Eye Relief.

Ever struggle to get a scope positioned right on an AR-15 or other flat-top rifle? You're not alone. Short rails, awkward eye relief, and scopes that won't sit where they need to — it's a frustrating setup problem with a straightforward fix. That fix is a cantilever mount. Here's everything you need to know.

Cantilever scope mount on rifle

What Is A Cantilever Mount?

A cantilever scope mount is a one-piece mount with the rings built into an extended base — one ring sits forward, beyond the receiver and over the barrel. The rear of the mount clamps solidly to the receiver while the scope is pushed out over the handguard, giving you extra inches of eye relief without any guesswork.

You may have also heard the term "offset mount." Same thing. The forward offset slides your scope out over the front of the rail for more reach — ideal for any shooter who's ever felt cramped behind glass on a short-rail platform.

By keeping the rings integrated into one base, a cantilever also eliminates the dreaded "bridging" problem — where two separate rings span both the receiver and the handguard, creating alignment headaches and potential zero shifts.
Scope mount detail Scope mount installed on rifle

Why AR-15 Shooters Rely On Them

Flat-top AR uppers leave very little top rail in front of the ejection port and charging handle. Try traditional rings and you'll end up juggling them between the receiver and handguard rail — usually with the wrong eye relief as your reward. A cantilever solves this with a built-in forward offset, typically 1.5 to 3 inches, all in one piece.

The result is a better cheek weld and a natural sight picture. Your head stays level, your eye sees the full reticle without craning forward, and the charging handle stays clear. It's the kind of setup that just works — and keeps working, because the whole mount bolts as one solid block to the receiver.

Running an LPVO (1–6x or 1–8x) or scout scope? These optics demand extra eye relief more than most. If you have a flat-top AR or similar rifle with limited rail space, a cantilever should be your first call.
AR rifle with cantilever mount and scope

Pros & Cons: The Honest Breakdown

Cantilever mounts aren't magic — but for the right rifle, they're close. Here's the real picture:

Advantages
Built-in eye relief — 1.5–3" of forward offset, no extra bases or risers needed.
Rock-solid construction — base and rings machined as one unit means no flex, no shift, no lost zero.
Easy install — one piece, bolt it down, done. No ring spacing or lapping required.
Clears the charging handle — no more mashing your face into the rifle to rack it.
Trade-Offs
Extra weight — one-piece designs run heavier than separate rings, though quality alloys help.
Fixed offset — the forward position is machined in. Swap optics and you may need a different mount.
Platform specific — built for Picatinny/AR rails. Not the go-to for a classic bolt-action hunting rig.
Weaver AR-MSR mount close up

Weaver Product Spotlight

Premium AR-MSR Optics Mount

Built specifically for flat-top MSRs, the Weaver Premium AR-MSR mount is machined from 7075-T6 aircraft-grade aluminum and features double recoil lugs with 3,600 lbs. of clamping force. At roughly 6 ounces, it delivers serious holding power without unnecessary bulk — keeping your optic locked and zeroed no matter how many rounds you put downrange.

7075-T6 Aluminum Double Recoil Lugs 3,600 LB Clamp Force ~6 oz. Picatinny Rail

For AR and flat-top enthusiasts, it's the straightforward answer to getting your optic exactly where it needs to be — and keeping it there.

"Any Time Your Scope Needs To Sit Farther Back On A Short Rail — A Cantilever Is The Answer."

The right mount doesn't just hold your scope — it becomes part of your system. Solid base, correct offset, zero that stays put.

Set it up right once. Then focus on the shot.