TL;DR: The high end scope was better but not glaringly better.
I recently bought a Trijicon Tenmile HX 3-18x50 FFP and a Vortex Razor LHT 3-15x50 SFP. I have had a Vortex Diamondback Tactical 4x16x44 FFP (unmounted) sitting in a safe for a long time. Since they are all unmounted, I was able to take them onto my front porch and try to compare them with various points of interest from about 100 yards out to a communications tower approximately 1600 yards away (per Google Earth) without freaking out my neighbors.
I was really excited to see the difference in coughing up the dough for a higher end scope like the Trijicon vs the cheap, I didn't really know any better at the time, Diamondback. I have to say I was disappointed in how much, or really how little, I perceived the difference in glass quality to be amongst them. Maybe it's a comment on the relative value/quality of the DB, I don't know.
The Tenmile is definitely better when looking at the tower 1,600 yards away. But it wasn't amazingly better as compared to the DB. I thought the DB was pretty clear at the 1600 yard distance. I don't think I expected the DB to look like I was looking through wax paper or something, but I really thought there would be a very stark contrast in the quality of what I saw. There was a difference, but I wasn't blown away by the difference. Candidly, I thought the DB looked the clearest of the three when looking at things 100-200 yards. Even though it was only 16x compared to the Tenmile's 18x, the mailbox at 200 yards actually looked like the DB had the higher magnification.
The LHT was maybe better than the DB at 1600 yards. It was honestly too close for me to call, but that tells me even if it was better, it was only marginally so. At 100 and 200 it was the worst of the 3 in my opinion. Again, for the price difference, I expected a much wider gap in view quality.
It was also interesting to me that on the DB, while I could adjust the parallax if I wanted to, I really didn't need to do it, regardless of whether I cranked the magnification up to 16x or not or whether the object was 200 yards away or 1,600. On both the Tenmile and Razor LHT, big changes in magnification and big changes in target distance both required changing the parallax to get a crisp image. Maybe that's a sign of higher quality, maybe it's just a weird quirk. I don't know, but would be interested to hear others' thoughts on that.
I'll admit, I'm not an expert optics. This is my completely untrained, under-educated, in-expert opinion. Maybe I'm looking at the wrong things, like not focusing on the view at the outer edge of the scope versus the center. For my "comparison" I ignored the eye relief. All I did was try to compare the clarity of what I was seeing.
I also didn't have a setup where I could set them up on a solid foundation with all three in a row pointed at the same thing at the same time so I could just move my eye from one to the next and back again. I had to put each one down, pickup the next one, find the "target" again and look while trying to remember how the image through the prior scope looked.
Am I crazy? Was my comparison fatally flawed? Is there something else I should have done to see and understand the difference in glass quality?
I recently bought a Trijicon Tenmile HX 3-18x50 FFP and a Vortex Razor LHT 3-15x50 SFP. I have had a Vortex Diamondback Tactical 4x16x44 FFP (unmounted) sitting in a safe for a long time. Since they are all unmounted, I was able to take them onto my front porch and try to compare them with various points of interest from about 100 yards out to a communications tower approximately 1600 yards away (per Google Earth) without freaking out my neighbors.
I was really excited to see the difference in coughing up the dough for a higher end scope like the Trijicon vs the cheap, I didn't really know any better at the time, Diamondback. I have to say I was disappointed in how much, or really how little, I perceived the difference in glass quality to be amongst them. Maybe it's a comment on the relative value/quality of the DB, I don't know.
The Tenmile is definitely better when looking at the tower 1,600 yards away. But it wasn't amazingly better as compared to the DB. I thought the DB was pretty clear at the 1600 yard distance. I don't think I expected the DB to look like I was looking through wax paper or something, but I really thought there would be a very stark contrast in the quality of what I saw. There was a difference, but I wasn't blown away by the difference. Candidly, I thought the DB looked the clearest of the three when looking at things 100-200 yards. Even though it was only 16x compared to the Tenmile's 18x, the mailbox at 200 yards actually looked like the DB had the higher magnification.
The LHT was maybe better than the DB at 1600 yards. It was honestly too close for me to call, but that tells me even if it was better, it was only marginally so. At 100 and 200 it was the worst of the 3 in my opinion. Again, for the price difference, I expected a much wider gap in view quality.
It was also interesting to me that on the DB, while I could adjust the parallax if I wanted to, I really didn't need to do it, regardless of whether I cranked the magnification up to 16x or not or whether the object was 200 yards away or 1,600. On both the Tenmile and Razor LHT, big changes in magnification and big changes in target distance both required changing the parallax to get a crisp image. Maybe that's a sign of higher quality, maybe it's just a weird quirk. I don't know, but would be interested to hear others' thoughts on that.
I'll admit, I'm not an expert optics. This is my completely untrained, under-educated, in-expert opinion. Maybe I'm looking at the wrong things, like not focusing on the view at the outer edge of the scope versus the center. For my "comparison" I ignored the eye relief. All I did was try to compare the clarity of what I was seeing.
I also didn't have a setup where I could set them up on a solid foundation with all three in a row pointed at the same thing at the same time so I could just move my eye from one to the next and back again. I had to put each one down, pickup the next one, find the "target" again and look while trying to remember how the image through the prior scope looked.
Am I crazy? Was my comparison fatally flawed? Is there something else I should have done to see and understand the difference in glass quality?