I find myself rifle hunting whitetail in my home state of MN in thick stuff where shot distances are most likely to be 10-50 yards. There are chances they could go 2-300 yards but very unlikely.
My current muzzle loaders and centerfire rifles used in MN are wearing SWFA 3-9 SS scopes. I have had no issue with low light but it's just not ideal for the application with the reticle and tunneling below 4x. Ideally Id like something that is 2-3x on the low end with a little more visible reticle, at least SWFA 3-9 brightness for low light, and trustworthy when it comes to holding zero. I'm thinking a 6.5 creedmoor or x47 with a 16-18" barrel is in the near future for this application so I can use a can without it being long as hell like on my current more western hunting oriented rifles.
Any ideas? The trijicon options caught my eye in 2-10x36 and 2.5-10x56 configuration. Reticles aren't my favorite but illum should help a bit. Bonus points for Mil vs MOA as I consciously transitioned away from all my MOA scopes but this will be primarily a point and shoot scope so MOA might not kill an otherwise good option.
Not particularly interested in the standard Leupold/swaro/zeiss options just for zero retention reasons.
They're hard to come by now since being discontinued and blown out at stupid cheap prices a few years ago. I have one on a .308 and love the reticle! Haven't hunted with it yet but it's been great on the range.I ran Vortex’s LH 1.5-8x on a muzzleloader. Great little scope. Not sure if it’s still available
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Sometimes companies discontinue the strangest things. I guess it gets to the bottom line.They're hard to come by now since being discontinued and blown out at stupid cheap prices a few years ago. I have one on a .308 and love the reticle! Haven't hunted with it yet but it's been great on the range.
I wouldn't call this scientific or conclusive by any means, but it's an interesting video from Iraqveteran8888 on the subject.You have “tested” shooting lots of different cartridges and bullet types through brush or brush simulator and seen that some don’t deflect and that others do?
It’s a google search away. There are as many “tests” and articles that say a 458WM is the best in deflection as there are that show a 243 with 100gr bullets is.
All bullets deflect, you can not know where any one will go, and trying to “bust brush” is a very poor way to deal with the issue.
Years ago outdoor life I believe actually did an article on this - their conclusion was no Bullet size weight or speed defies hitting branches.Care to share some data points to back that up? My actual experience says otherwise.
I'm interested in the SWFA 1-4 or 1-6 for a similar application. I searched a bit but didn't turn up a ton. @Formidilosus - any experience with these scopes? Do they hold zero like the 3-9 and 6x?
If you watch the 1st video that I posted, you'll see a 45-70 chop a shrub in half and still hit the target. I don't know how repeatable that is, nor do I think someone should shoot stuff thru brush. All I'm saying is, the slower heavier calibers were clearly better at punching thru brush than light, fast moving rounds.Years ago outdoor life I believe actually did an article on this - their conclusion was no Bullet size weight or speed defies hitting branches.
I'm glad you found it informative like I did. Its not a perfect test but still provides some data for consideration. I'm definitely not promoting anyone to start shooting thru brush but it's good to see what the possibilities are. Especially for those who hunt brushy shit in bear country.i did watch it, informative and all. thanks for that justsome
don't want to go down a rabbit hole - an not steer anyone away from their values at all!
but i could point out flaws in his methodology before i would draw any firm conclusions
Quality non ballistic turret 2-7 power scope. Dialing is going to be irrelevant unless you plan on having fun at the range beyond 300 yards.