Here's what I went with
Leupold VX-III 1.75 - 6 x 32mm comes in at 10.9oz
Leupold VX-III 1.75 - 6 x 32mm comes in at 10.9oz
It is all about the eyes, the older you get the less they work. Weve got these stupid antler rules too. More magnification is better.6 ounces is a lot in scope weight, and definitely a lot when you start adding up all the other ounces. It can also be a lot in rifle balance with lighter weight guns. I've stuck with Leupolds because of the weight to quality ratio. However, the current trend is towards 30mm tubes and dialing, so I'm a bit old school in that regard.
Curious as to why a 3-9x is necessary for 200-250 yard shots? My highest power scope ever is 2.5-8 (that was a big jump for me) and I've used 1-4x, 1.75-6x and similar. Haven't run into a problem.
When it comes to brightness, quality does come into play in a big way, but so does exit pupil and that is related to power. Higher power scopes need larger objectives for brightness (we'll leave quality out, but that's probably most important.) For a bino analogy, I'm totally happy with good 8x30/32 binos for brightness, but want 10x42s to get the same. If you throw a pair of Swaro 10x32s at me, I won't drop them though.
I couldn’t be more happy. The clarity is fantastic and low light performance is much better than I anticipated. I’ve loved being able to keep both eyes open on low power, and field of view is kinda about as wide as your eyes can see when the magnification is bottomed out.Was wondering how you liked the TR25 after a full season and what reticle you went with?
I don’t have a ton of experience with LPVO’s. But I’ve had no issues getting comfortable behind it. I think, generally speaking, Trijicon makes a solid product in all the important areas.@Old-Cat how have you found the eye box and general useability of that scope compared to others youve used?