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This is a drop evaluation of the new the original Maven RS1 2.5-15x44mm SHR-W MOA scope. There have been questions as to whether the RS1 and RS1.2 were “the same” scope, and whether or not the RS1 is as reliable in zero retention.
This scope was sent to @Ryan Avery from a forum member to be evaled. The ammunition used was Federal Gold Medal Match 168 SMK that was purchased by Shoot2Hunt for these evals. The 20 round proof group was 1.2 MOA.
Scope and weight:

Turrets:
Capped, not revolution indicated, 20 MOA per turn, no zero stop.

Turrets are much more “snappy” and firm than RS1.2.
Zeroing:
Mounting was 20 in-lbs on ring caps, 65 in-lbs on base.
First three shots after bore. sighting are the ones left of the center dot. Adjusted right .75 MOA, the next three are in the dot. Adjusted right .25 MOA, and the next 5 are on the left dot. Adjusted right .5 MOA, and the last three are in the bottom dot.


Notes during zeroing:
Adjustments did not seem to move as they should. I had to make a total of 1.5 MOA right adjustments to get it zeroed (when the initial three only need .75), and with the cone that is unlikely to have been the case. The initial groups were small at only 3 and 5 shots, but- it did not seem to be responding as it should.
Drop Evaluation and “Tracking”
For an explanation see- Scope Field Eval Explanation and Standards
The “test” consists of three 18” drops on a mat- one left/right/top with a shot to check zero after each drop. Then the exact same thing repeated from 36”. Then three drops on all three sides for nine drops on the last part- 15 drops total. This is not “abuse”. The 18” drops are a joke really. The 36” start showing something. And when a scope make/model consistently goes through the whole thing without losing zero, failures in actual use are almost unheard of.
This one was conducted on semi packed dirt, with a 2x padded shooting mats on top.
Shifts were predictable- left side drops bullet impacted left, right side- bullet went right, top drop- bullet went high.


The drop eval was a failure for the RS1- though the center remained the same. It was not an abject, catastrophic failure as it was still zeroed after the drop portions, but during drops the first shot after an impact showed a shift. It is possible that I could remount and drop it again- and I will if the owner would like me too, however the impacts had a predictable shift in the corresponding direction and that is a pretty reliable indicator that the scope is shifting.
Cont…
This scope was sent to @Ryan Avery from a forum member to be evaled. The ammunition used was Federal Gold Medal Match 168 SMK that was purchased by Shoot2Hunt for these evals. The 20 round proof group was 1.2 MOA.
Scope and weight:

Turrets:
Capped, not revolution indicated, 20 MOA per turn, no zero stop.

Turrets are much more “snappy” and firm than RS1.2.
Zeroing:
Mounting was 20 in-lbs on ring caps, 65 in-lbs on base.
First three shots after bore. sighting are the ones left of the center dot. Adjusted right .75 MOA, the next three are in the dot. Adjusted right .25 MOA, and the next 5 are on the left dot. Adjusted right .5 MOA, and the last three are in the bottom dot.


Notes during zeroing:
Adjustments did not seem to move as they should. I had to make a total of 1.5 MOA right adjustments to get it zeroed (when the initial three only need .75), and with the cone that is unlikely to have been the case. The initial groups were small at only 3 and 5 shots, but- it did not seem to be responding as it should.
Drop Evaluation and “Tracking”
For an explanation see- Scope Field Eval Explanation and Standards
The “test” consists of three 18” drops on a mat- one left/right/top with a shot to check zero after each drop. Then the exact same thing repeated from 36”. Then three drops on all three sides for nine drops on the last part- 15 drops total. This is not “abuse”. The 18” drops are a joke really. The 36” start showing something. And when a scope make/model consistently goes through the whole thing without losing zero, failures in actual use are almost unheard of.
This one was conducted on semi packed dirt, with a 2x padded shooting mats on top.
Shifts were predictable- left side drops bullet impacted left, right side- bullet went right, top drop- bullet went high.


The drop eval was a failure for the RS1- though the center remained the same. It was not an abject, catastrophic failure as it was still zeroed after the drop portions, but during drops the first shot after an impact showed a shift. It is possible that I could remount and drop it again- and I will if the owner would like me too, however the impacts had a predictable shift in the corresponding direction and that is a pretty reliable indicator that the scope is shifting.
Cont…