Low light comparison of 10 scopes

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Dec 2, 2017
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Northeast Pa
Thanks for taking the time, however it would have been nice if a few Leupolds were in the line-up as most know their glass is quite good. Most think Leupold could do better in the reliability segment, but perhaps the others could also learn a few things about superior optical quality and reticle design from Leupold. You have to see it to be able to hit it. Maybe next time be a bit fairer in that line-up for everyone's benefit, including those that like Leupold. I'm betting a dollar to a donut Leupold would have shined quite well in comparison....but RS could never give any credit to a manufacturer they absolutely hate. They wouldn't want to have to send a note along to SWFA to up their game in optical quality. It might raise the price of a SWFA to over 300 bucks...LOL.
 

Tod osier

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Sep 11, 2015
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Fairfield County, CT -> Sublette County, WY
Thanks for taking the time, however it would have been nice if a few Leupolds were in the line-up as most know their glass is quite good. Most think Leupold could do better in the reliability segment, but perhaps the others could also learn a few things about superior optical quality and reticle design from Leupold. You have to see it to be able to hit it. Maybe next time be a bit fairer in that line-up for everyone's benefit, including those that like Leupold. I'm betting a dollar to a donut Leupold would have shined quite well in comparison....but RS could never give any credit to a manufacturer they absolutely hate. They wouldn't want to have to send a note along to SWFA to up their game in optical quality. It might raise the price of a SWFA to over 300 bucks...LOL.

Thais is a test anyone can do, why don't you have at it?!?!
 

Skydog

FNG
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Dec 11, 2024
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6
Rookie question here...and also a question from someone who has never owned a scope with an illuminated reticle, but who is about to purchase a Trijicon Credo with illumination...

For someone who anticipates taking shots at deer during low light scenarios, why wouldn't an illuminated reticle be the best option? Wouldn't this be a huge advantage in low light scenarios? And even if the illumination wasn't working (dead battery/malfunction), wouldn't it still be as good as hunting with a non-illuminated scope, i.e. you'd still have a reticle, just not an illuminated one, right?
 

Macintosh

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Feb 17, 2018
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Rookie question here...and also a question from someone who has never owned a scope with an illuminated reticle, but who is about to purchase a Trijicon Credo with illumination...

For someone who anticipates taking shots at deer during low light scenarios, why wouldn't an illuminated reticle be the best option? Wouldn't this be a huge advantage in low light scenarios? And even if the illumination wasn't working (dead battery/malfunction), wouldn't it still be as good as hunting with a non-illuminated scope, i.e. you'd still have a reticle, just not an illuminated one, right?
It probably is, its just highly dependent on the illumination and the reticle. If the illumination is too bright—and it takes extremely little illumination to be too bright, many dont go low enough—then it will wash out the image, and you cant see what youre trying to shoot at. Also if there is any bleed on the illumination it does the same. Its difficult to get the illumination set correctly beforehand as the light is rapidly fading, so its often on too-bright of a setting when you need it unless you already know what setting you need or you start from setting 1.

Yes, if the illumination fails then you simply have a (heavier, more expensive) non-illuminated scope.

To me most illuminated reticles that Ive actually used in the field are good for very busy backgrounds where the reticle is amidst clutter, more so than for extremely dark conditions. Either that or they make a FFP reticle thats too fine to use at lower magnifications more visible.
 
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Skydog

FNG
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Dec 11, 2024
Messages
6
Yes, if the illumination fails then you simply have a (heavier, more expensive) non-illuminated scope.
Actually, I'm looking at the Trijicon Credo 3-9X40 Standard Duplex (illuminated) in comparison to the Trijicon Huron Standard Duplex 3-9X40 (non-illuminated), and even though they both supposedly have the Standard Duplex reticles... the reticles are not the same. The thin, center cross hair section on the Credo looks much larger than the one on the Huron. So, would the Huron be better in low light compared to the Credo (if the illumination is turned off/not working)? And would the Huron be better during normal daylight scenarios?
 
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