Capped vs. Exposed Turrets: What is your application going to be?

JW@TRACT

Lil-Rokslider
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Dec 23, 2020
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Southwest CO
Do you guys prefer capped or exposed turrets? What has helped you make that decision? While it seems like most of us who dial, dial for elevation, does anyone dial for wind?
 

croben

WKR
Joined
Aug 21, 2022
Messages
332
I’ve been shooting Nightforce for a while now. I like their system with the exposed elevation turret and capped windage turret. I’ve never been a fan of dialing for wind, so I rarely ever touch windage anyways. If you’re worried about exposed turrets spinning, you can go with zero stops.
 
Joined
Mar 27, 2019
Messages
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Location
Lyon County, NV
Do you guys prefer capped or exposed turrets? What has helped you make that decision? While it seems like most of us who dial, dial for elevation, does anyone dial for wind?

What seems to be uncommon with optics manufacturers is appreciation of the value of low-profile turrets for actual field use

PRS, it doesn't matter so much, and the tacticool world doesn't seem to get it or care. But for hunting, it does help a great deal - especially in pulling out of a scabbard (ATV, horseback, etc), from the back seat of a truck, etc. Lower profile also can help make them more durable, just by getting bumped less, and there being less leverage against the mechanics if it's a short turret that gets bumped.

If you're digging into Rokslide for market intelligence, @JW@TRACT, please be sure to dig into the scope drop-testing of so many different brands. There's a lot of really good data in there, far more applicable than the lab-oriented recoil and g-force tests some companies tout. If you really want to knock it out of the park, speak to @Formidilosus directly - you'd probably have a hard time finding a better person to glean real-world product testing intelligence from.

Also, it's worth noting that one of your primary competitors - Maven - has been sold out of their RS 1.2 over the last few months for what may very well be because of the reviews and market demand generated on Rokslide and the tests that have been published here. They've been sold out within an hour of anyone here saying they're back in stock, several times now.
 

Marbles

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May 16, 2020
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4,569
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AK
Dial for elevation, hold for wind. So capped windage, exposed elevation is my preference.

Also, it's worth noting that one of your primary competitors - Maven - has been sold out of their RS 1.2 over the last few months for what may very well be because of the reviews and market demand generated on Rokslide and the tests that have been published here. They've been sold out within an hour of anyone here saying they're back in stock, several times now.
This^^^^^
 

TN2shot07

WKR
Joined
Dec 19, 2020
Messages
677
Depends on the intention for the rifle, I have a lot of set and forget it scopes. For those I’m perfectly content with capped turrets. If I was putting a rifle together with the intention of dialing, capped windage and exposed elevation.
 
Joined
Jul 20, 2019
Messages
2,629
Do you guys prefer capped or exposed turrets? What has helped you make that decision? While it seems like most of us who dial, dial for elevation, does anyone dial for wind?
First, design a scope that will pass the drop test. Then make sure that it has exposed elevation turrets and capped windage turrets.
 

Ucsdryder

WKR
Joined
Jan 24, 2015
Messages
6,773
Biggest buck I’ve ever shot at (200” class buck) was missed because my turret got dialed busting brush.

I’ll take a capped windage and locking elevation with a zero stop!
 
Joined
Feb 28, 2019
Messages
811
Location
MS
Low profile exposed elevation (preferably locking) and capped windage. And make a scope that will pass the drop test AND has a good reticle. Until you do both of those (drop test and reticIe) I won't even consider spending money with Tract.
 

Kurts86

WKR
Joined
Aug 15, 2020
Messages
609
I used to think exposed turrets were a liability before I used them in the field and a decade later I’ve never had them move on me or be a problem.

Capped elevation turrets are only desirable to me on a very light scope with a range expectation under 400 yards and a good BDC. Capped turrets mean lost caps when I dial on the range or in the field.

Windage should always be capped.
 
Joined
Sep 29, 2021
Messages
309
I dial for elevation and hold for wind, so I'd prefer exposed elevation and capped windage.

However my primary hunting scopes have exposed turrets for both. In terms of importance, turret configuration comes after zero retention, durability, reticle design, reasonable magnification ranges, etc.

I have had an exposed elevation turret turn .1 mil from zero after a particularly nasty bushwack, so a locking turret sounds like it could be nice, but in reality I check my rifle often during a hunt and it likely wouldn't cause an issue.
 
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