They’ve been coming back into stock very quickly so far.Rockslide has me sold on this scope for a Tikka 7PRC build. I just wish it was in stock.
Has anyone found out yet what’s different about this scope? Thicker tube? Stronger springs?
Are you skeptical of their statement?According to Maven, the RS1.2 is “exactly the same” as the RS1 except for external turret and reticle…. They are supposed to be sending Ryan an RS1 to eval.
lightweight scope options
that don't break.
Yes, but plenty of scope manufacturers use things like tube thickness, stainless steel, brass, etc., metal vs plastic, and coil vs leaf springs in their marketing materials to illustrate how their construction is more robust than the competition. They could be general enough to answer the question without divulging trade secrets. There’s no secret to a 3/32” thick tube vs 1/16”.It's propriety competitive advantage not to tell, so they shouldn't. But companies should be applying the secret sauce to all their products, not just a random selection as maven currently seems to.
Marketing materials don't mean crap, and it's about drop tests and reall life use. Isn't it???Yes, but plenty of scope manufacturers use things like tube thickness, stainless steel, brass, etc., metal vs plastic, and coil vs leaf springs in their marketing materials to illustrate how their construction is more robust than the competition. They could be general enough to answer the question without divulging trade secrets. There’s no secret to a 3/32” thick tube vs 1/16”.
Their response that it’s all the exact same except for features is obviously BS.
I’d buy one in a heartbeat, but I need more confidence and a legit explanation what makes this one different. BS answers and hiding behind marketing speak does not instill confidence. Actually, for me, it does the opposite.
It's propriety competitive advantage not to tell, so they shouldn't. But companies should be applying the secret sauce to all their products, not just a random selection as maven currently seems to.
Yes, but plenty of scope manufacturers use things like tube thickness, stainless steel, brass, etc., metal vs plastic, and coil vs leaf springs in their marketing materials to illustrate how their construction is more robust than the competition. They could be general enough to answer the question without divulging trade secrets. There’s no secret to a 3/32” thick tube vs 1/16”.
Their response that it’s all the exact same except for features is obviously BS.
I’d buy one in a heartbeat, but I need more confidence and a legit explanation what makes this one different. BS answers and hiding behind marketing speak does not instill confidence. Actually, for me, it does the opposite.
True. They could secretly tell me though. I wouldn’t spread anything. Promise.
Yes, but plenty of scope manufacturers use things like tube thickness, stainless steel, brass, etc., metal vs plastic, and coil vs leaf springs in their marketing materials to illustrate how their construction is more robust than the competition. They could be general enough to answer the question without divulging trade secrets. There’s no secret to a 3/32” thick tube vs 1/16”.
Their response that it’s all the exact same except for features is obviously BS.
I’d buy one in a heartbeat, but I need more confidence and a legit explanation what makes this one different. BS answers and hiding behind marketing speak does not instill confidence. Actually, for me, it does the opposite.
Yes, but plenty of scope manufacturers use things like tube thickness, stainless steel, brass, etc., metal vs plastic, and coil vs leaf springs in their marketing materials to illustrate how their construction is more robust than the competition. They could be general enough to answer the question without divulging trade secrets. There’s no secret to a 3/32” thick tube vs 1/16”.
Their response that it’s all the exact same except for features is obviously BS.
I’d buy one in a heartbeat, but I need more confidence and a legit explanation what makes this one different. BS answers and hiding behind marketing speak does not instill confidence. Actually, for me, it does the opposite.
Here’s a couple examples:I am interested in reading these rifle scope marketing materials from plenty of manufacturers that describe the usage of different types of metal and springs, can you link or PM them?
What marketing speak is being hidden behind in the case of the RS1.2?
Here’s just one example:
And the marketing speak I’m referring to came in the form of an email from the company when I specifically asked what is different about this scope. I was told the same things apparently Form was: the reticle had changed and the exterior turret was different. I was told “ all of our scopes are designed to the same durability standards”. to me, that’s marketing speak when real world results have shown otherwise.
I’m not trying to call anyone out, but why then do the results not mirror the claim? Multiple people have asked for further explanation, and not gotten any genuine answers. Only the same regurgitated response. The lack of concrete info just seems evasive. It triggers the BS meter. Address the issue head on. If there’s a logical explanation, let’s hear it.I was told the same by Cade when interviewing him for the review here. RS1 and RS1.2 have no internal changes. I am not seeing how that is marketing speak though and nobody has information to the contrary. Would it be marketing speak if true?
I think we have different concepts of what "marketing materials" are, but I appreciate the link.
I’m not trying to call anyone out, but why then do the results not mirror the claim?
The information he seems to have matches my first hand conversation in regards to the RS1 = RS1.2.According to Maven, the RS1.2 is “exactly the same” as the RS1 except for external turret and reticle…. They are supposed to be sending Ryan an RS1 to eval.