Yeah I believe performance/features should matter way more depending on your type of hunt. If you had two items that had the same performance but one was heavier but cheaper and vice versa where do you draw that line?Depends on the quality of the item and its purpose. Binos cost a ton of money. Last year I invested in new glass that cost $500 more but was 2oz lighter. Is that $250/oz? Not really, because the quality was also significantly better.
I also use a River Country tent that at 2lbs 14oz is significantly lighter than a lot of what I see others carrying. It's not quite "ultralight" but I like a tent with a floor so that's a wash to me. But it's also only $70, so if somebody else pays $250 for something a pound heavier... was that -$11.25 per oz?
I don't think there's a formula here that's going to consistently reflect the needs of hunters. Even if you tried to factor in additional elements like "quality" there'd be no way to consistently account for differences in hunting style for everyone. A mountain hunter has different needs and problems than a tree-stand hunter. Somebody who prefers run-and-gun cares about different things than a spot-and-stalk'er.
What I can say is I think most folks will consistently pay more for features than anything else. I'd be more likely to buy a water filter at the same weight as my current one if it was easier to clean, more freeze-resistant, or had better fittings, than one that was 2oz lighter but had the same features. But that's just me.
Yea, at a certain point you just become the "Ranch Fairy" of light gear.....shit don't matterI did an analysis one time of current gear and potential purchases to prioritize by weight savings value. That assumes function is held equal. I think I stopped around $10/oz. There were options between $10/oz and $100/oz. People talk about $100/oz sometimes, like ultralight backpacking folks. That seems crazy to me.
Hard to say it better.Efficiency is more important then strictly weight but I've been guilty of paying alot per ounce..often to afford packing weight in another category
It's hard to use a big brush when justifying if the cost is worth it..some hunts yes...some hunts no..some gear yes il spend 100s per ounce while some gear the cons of ultralight are way to great irregardless of the price
Hope this helps
Another way to look at this is how much the item contributes to your success. If performance was equal I'd probably spend $100 (or more) per ounce to save weight on my rifle but there's no way that logic applies if I'm buying a headlamp.Yeah I believe performance/features should matter way more depending on your type of hunt. If you had two items that had the same performance but one was heavier but cheaper and vice versa where do you draw that line?