Great advice. Thanks!Don't get stuck on minimum magnification, when people say low mag is important they really mean FOV is important at lowest mag, and that can be deceiving. Lets look at three scopes with the "same" 2.5x on the bottom:
Leupold 2.5-8x36 - 37.5' FOV @ 2.5x
Trijicon Credo 2.5-15x42 - 41.2' FOV @ 2.5x
NF NX8 2.5-20x50 - 41.8' FOV @ 2.5x
I know that doesn't seem like a big difference, but if you are buying a scope with a lower power minimum magnification because it has a low power minimum magnification, then it makes all the difference in the world - the Trijicon and NF can see more than 10% more area at minimum mag than the Loopy can.
So long story short, compare FOV not magnification ranges. There are some eye opening revelations when you look at some examples - compare a 4.5-14x50 Leupold to a 6-24x50 Vortex AMG for instance - there is a 6x that would be more useful at 6x then that 4.5 would be at 4.5.
That's a great sea story. Helps confirm my choice for the NX8 2.5-20. Thanks for taking the time to reply!I used to want more magnification because I thought it would give me an advantage. Turns out the opposite was true in a couple of hunting situations.
I missed an opportunity on a bull at close range (40-50 yds) in thick cover using a 4.5-14x44 several years ago. Couldn't get on him quick enough before he disappeared. Ever since then, I have used scopes with lower power and a much wider field of view on the bottom end (2-12x42 currently). I have not missed the higher magnification, except at the range.
Last year, my buddy put 2 rounds into the vitals of a large bull elk with a 300 WM at 200 yds. The bull tumbled downhill and came to rest against a tree after the second shot. An hour later, as we approached the bull to begin breaking him down... the dang thing jumped up and took off at a full sprint. It took 2 more rounds with a 30-06 to put him down. 5x at 10 yds on a running bull would have been difficult.
Those 2 experiences have shaped my opinion on scope magnification. I have a 50x spotter if big magnification is needed. The scope just needs to direct my bullet to the target once I decide to take a shot.
However, today's technology can give you some of both. These options come to mind...
- NF NX8 2.5-20x50
- Trijicon Credo HX 2.5-15x42
- Leica Amplus 6 - 3-18x44
I do think a 5-30x would be awesome as a dedicated long range scope at the range.
That's just my opinion. Hope it helps. Good luck in your search.
5x is fine. I can't think of a single situation where I wished I had less magnification.
this is exactly right. Pay attention to the field of view of the scope, not necessarily only the magnification.Is it low end magnification, or field of view that is the quest?
Honest question. Wouldn’t looking through the scope in this scenario potentially end poorly for you?Charging grizzly inside of 30 yds?
No matter what you do, that scenario potentially ends poorly for youHonest question. Wouldn’t looking through the scope in this scenario potentially end poorly for you?
No matter what you do, that scenario potentially ends poorly for you
Agree, I’d prefer a scope dialed to 1x-2x to hip firing any day (the post I responded to). I just decided to be funny instead because, frankly, it’s a crap position to be in no matter what scope you have.Maybe...preparation is key.
If I have a rifle in hand ready to fire (because I'm already hunting), I'm not going to drop it and try to draw my sidearm. I'm certainly not going to drop the rifle to attempt to deploy bear spray (which may not work and may end up blinding me).
Snap shooting a rifle will be easier with low power (wide FOV) optic.
An Official Journal Of The NRA | Skills Check: Snap-Shooting Rifle Drill
Shooting a rifle quickly at close range involves a number of important skills worth practicing and keeping sharp. Here's a snap-shooting drill to test your rifle skills.www.shootingillustrated.com
I have a private range and I've started a practice lately of always taking some standing shots at 100 yards before packing the rifle up. I give myself about a second and make the best shot I can- just a few rounds mind you (I'm cheap about burning ammo). I also let myself rest a few minutes between shots.I've shot several coyotes at 6x around 50 yards.
But it really depends more on you then the scope. If you're gonna let your rifle sit most of the year and shoot a 3 round group in camp the day before opener it will be more of a problem.
If you spend time shouldering and dry firing your rifle practicing target accusation it won't be a problem.