slim9300
WKR
To those of you that have difficulty with reading comprehension, I'm going to simplify it for you.
Can you use a scope to differentiate between a 2 point buck and a 3 point buck?
If you think that the op asked "Can you use your rifle scope to identify unidentified objects?", You are a "backwards, mentally challenged, inconsiderate, lazy retard" because you either failed to read or failed to comprehend the question asked. Furthermore, it could be argued that only a "backwards, mentally challenged, inconsiderate, lazy retard" would carry three tools, if & when the job could be done with two.
Again the OP basically asked "Can you use a scope to differentiate between a 2 point buck and a 3 point buck?"
To the OP- Yes with a quality scope you can count points in some instances, depending on weather, terrain, & illumination. At times a spotting scope will be better depending on weather, terrain, & illumination.
Exactly. 99% of the time when I have a spotter and I’m rifle hunting (of course I always have binos and RF) it goes like this...
Spot deer/elk/bear with my binos at 100-800 yards.
Lay down with rifle and shoot/pick apart. The only way I’m pulling out the spotter is if I am confident I have lots of time, or want to record the shot. If I have a partner, he’s on the spotter and I’m on the rifle, and we are attempting to get on the animal simultaneously. He is calling wind, I am reading wind through my scope, and taking a range with KILO2400 for dial (if outside of 400 yards).
Spot deer/elk/bear with my binos at 1000+ yards.
Pull out spotter and determine if it’s worth getting closer.
I almost never glass/scan with a spotter. If I even considered using a rifle scope to replace a spotter, I would never scan with a rifle scope. But this isn’t even something I want to do, only something I have considered.
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