Unfortunately, through the testing being performed here (check the long range hunting forum, thereâs a sub-forum titled âScope Testingâ or something to that affect), mechanical reliability does not correlate with price spent. One of the most popular optics on here, SWFA fixed powers, are about $300 and are known to be mechanically great, both in zero retention and tracking.
Contrast that with the Leupold MK5 test (check that subforum), one of the most expensive optics tested, and both of the test subjects failed MISERABLY. An optics company needs to specifically design and test for zero retention from impacts, and the vast majority donât. The Trijicon, though we donât know to what extent, is impact tested. Leupold tests to â50,000 Gâs of force,â but impacts scare them.
Youâll see patterns the longer youâre here, one of them being we place an emphasis on zero retention and durability, and glass is secondary. Not that we donât want good glass, but weâve decided that we would rather have Leupold VX3-ish glass quality and rock solid internals, rather than Swaro Glass and VX3 (or Swaro, for that matter) internals. Once the glass is âgood enoughâ to not be the reason you donât make a kill, anything better is just a bonus. But most scopes are mechanically inferior.
Then thereâs the rabbit hole of mounting systems, action torque specs, action/trigger mechanism reliability, itâs never endingâŠ
I really would encourage you to check out the Trijicon, itâll probably be the closest to what youâre wanting.