Not sure how much research you’ve done, but I don’t see FFP being majorly beneficial for modern hunting.
I have a hard time with this. I had SFP optics. I cannot imagine going back unless what I wanted had no choice. This is because FFP optics have accurate mil scaling. I use it for quick hold overs and all wind corrections.
Why correct wind by reticle hash marks…..because it is ever changing. Very hard to dial for shifts.
Also, when making a quick 400yd shot, sometimes nervous deer make me want to do a quick mil scale estimate….it is hard to miss at 400 yds, as long as you do something!
SFP makes this impossible or you are using the deer’s body to adjust. How many know where to hold on the deer for wind? I don’t. Frankly, I was just passing up most shots over 350 yds.
Last, on a shot where you need to use mil scale, but deer is too big in scope. This can happen at ~400 yds. What happens is at 20x, the mil scale can be used, but it can be hard to track if a deer is hit. In an ffp, I would just shoot at 10x for more fov.
The thickness and impact at light conditions is something I had not heard before and a major factor.
This thickness, lighting concern is often over blown. Most ffp scopes have illumination. Also, at low power, the thick part of the ffp can be used to place the aim point. At mid power, you get a reticle that is more visible due to all the hash marks…..again usually this is done at 100 yds.
SFP definitely excels in an environment where you will 100% dial. It excels in short range LVPO’s. It is fine on your guns setup using max point blank range methods. It is also generally cheaper.
I own the SWFA 3-15x mil-quad scope. It looks better in real life than the above pics.