- Banned
- #81
Thanks for your input, I've ran leupolds most of my life, missed some great animals, watched animals missed by others, seen poi not change after adjustments at the range...
Surely has been shooter error.
Stick with them if u please, I put too much time and money into hunting gonna have equipment that does what it is meant to do.
Leupold fixes and replacements are just band-aids. The repairs are only as good as the original parts and that's the issue. Same with vortex. They are not built to do what they are marketed as.The guys with leupold problems, why in the world would you not send them back to get fixed or replaced ? Don’t make any sense.
Sent many back actually over the years of using them. The issue is if they go down on a long awaited hunt or tag. Never use them anymore actually.The guys with leupold problems, why in the world would you not send them back to get fixed or replaced ? Don’t make any sense.
Totally understand that Luke. And agree with you. It’s just a shame that we have to settle. Everything else in gear is going the lightweight direction, except scopes. It’s a head scratcher to me!I agree it is too bad. However, once I realized this one of the most quibbled about 1/4-1/3 of a pound things I used to worry about I just rock on with a 19-20 oz scope instead of a 14-16 oz scope and moved on to worrying about other things. Once something else that actual does meet the criteria you described above come to market (which would be great) I'll jump on it. Till then I have accepted that extra 1/4 pound.
Who here is running a lighter weight rifle with a “heavy” scope on it??? I dabbled a bit last year but bailed. Now with more opportunities for longer range shooting, I’ve sort of started going back to putting larger scopes on my rifles.
I’m working on mounting an SWFA 3-9 on my kimber Montana and an SWFA 3-15 on my tikka superlite.
Is anybody else here doing something similar? Thoughts? Feelings? Pictures?
I’ve started to mean this way because I want a more robust aiming system than some of the ultralight scopes I was using and I also want the ability to dial for elevation reliably And more confidently than just aiming high.
I’m finding that even with the heavier scopes my rifles still sit from under 6.5lbs to just over 7.5lbs so really the extra pound seems worth it for a more reliably and repeatable set up.
Just sold a v4 4-16x44, only because I sold the rifle.Anyone have experience with either the Zeiss Conquest V4 or the Burris Veracity? Both are dialable, ~20 ounces, have logical magnification ranges and are under a grand. I had a 3-9 Zeiss Conquest years ago, and it was a really excellent optic.
While Zeiss makes fine products, if you need support, they are terrible. I’ve owned a pile of Zeiss products and I’ll never buy another one after 2 very difficult and unsuccessful CS experiences.
Leica, Swaro, Leupold, Nightforce, Vortex don’t have such problems. They fix stuff without fuss or cost, deliver on promises and do so promptly. None of which can be said for Zeiss.