The scope drop threads are goldI’m using it correctly. Embrace your charismatic role. Don’t fight it. Embrace it. I’m not a convert yet, though I do pause before I buy scopes now. I run to the Bible….i mean scope drop threads…before I buy now.
I’m curious why Gunwerks would sell so many $10k guns with a known junk scope on top. They seem to be one of the few remaining companies that rank reliability over partnership $$, and they sell leupolds with no fine print warning right next to the NF’s and Revics.
I wont trust a leupy for a hunt anymore. Been letdown on bad zero retention before. You use one if you like though.
Good thing there are scopes that have a higher track record for reliability (ALL scopes can fail, its a question of statistical occurance) for well under $2k.Some people aren't elite enough to drop 2k on a scope.
You're probably the 50th person to come into a scope thread with a mythical "Leupold VX" series that has "never lost zero".I have a Leupold VX-5 that has been shipped Fedex, been on countless float planes in Alaska, truck hunts, backpack hunts as well as multiple boat rides. It has remained spot on as have my other VX-5 scopes in snotty weather. Somehow I managed to have another successful hunt with it last week again in Alaska. IDK but the believers would have you believe it's not possible. I have Leupold, Nightforce and Maven scopes currently. I started shooting a few competitions this year and by far the most used scope is the Mark 5. It is also the scope winning most of the competitions. My Mark 4 HD took second overall twice. At one competition in Idaho I saw two of the "passed" scopes fail including a Nightforce. I was a range officer scoring the competitors at that event.
Nice to see some love for the Leupolds. I'm super interested in the Mark4. Some people aren't elite enough to drop 2k on a scope. Some people don't have the extra time or extra coin to shoot 20k rounds a year. So if shooting 6 rounds before deer season through a rifle topped with a leupold still puts food on the table, hell yeah! I got a leupold vx3 on my Tikka, it'll stay there still i have a real reason to swap it out.
Sent from my SM-S921U using Tapatalk
Losing zero is losing zero. If your zero shifts 2" high and 2" right and you still impacted the animal, the scope still lost zero.
That's not really what people are saying though. They're just saying you have a much higher chance of having issues with any given Leupold than you do something like a NF. Nightforce scopes will still occasionally have issues, just much more rarely. This is a frequency thing and I don't see why people have a hard time wrapping their minds around the concept of averages.IDK but the believers would have you believe it's not possible.
It certainly is. They're a hell of a lot of scope for the price for competition guns. And if the zero happens to wander a bit that's alright you can correct it before the competition starts at the zero range. And given how little abuse PRS scopes take that's kind of a minimal risk. For the right set of requirements they make a lot of sense.I started shooting a few competitions this year and by far the most used scope is the Mark 5.
Nightforce scopes do occasionally have issues just like any other scope. I know someone who broke a turret on an ATACR for instance. Out of curiosity, what was the Nightforce fail though? Did the scope have a zero shift or was it some other mechanical issue that popped up?At one competition in Idaho I saw two of the "passed" scopes fail including a Nightforce.
If shooting six rounds per year is your idea of marksmanship, I'm fairly confident that you probably don't have the skill set to identify minor shifts in zero.
There's a number of reliable scopes available for well under $2k.
I'm sure you were being facetious, but very few (any?) people are shooting 20k rounds. A modest budget certainly allows for a few hundred, at least.