SD:
FWIW, the Vortex LH and LHT scopes were/are also made by LOW, and they didn't always do so well on drop tests, either. Likewise, there seems to be enough anecdotal evidence of some hiccups with these models during less rigorous general use. So while LOW obviously knows how to build a durable scope, seems they'll also build whatever is specified.
Seems that the extra couple ounces the scopes in reference through the recent posts shave off are very integral in terms of reliability and impact resistance.
IME, I've come to the conclusion that 20 ounce is about minimum for a reliable dialing scope - SWFA 6x and 3-9HD. If you want to add more X, PA, illumination, bigger objective, etc, you'll be lucky to stay under 25 ounces - 30 ounces.
A 20 ounce 3-9 SWFA will do anything I need to get done as far as shots on big game. I like the LRHS reticle a little better for some things, so I don't mind the extra couple ounce penalty they come with.
Overall, I'm slightly perplexed at the arbitrary nature many assign to scope weight. Such as nothing over 15, or 20, or 25, etc, etc. To a certain extent, what's the functional difference in say 2-3 more or less ounces? It's not a deciding factor in much as far as actual use, so why the strong opinions and declarations that weight over a certain point can't be tolerated? I look for the features I need, such as reliability first, reticle second, and the weight will be whatever it is. Most reliable scopes are close enough in weight that it's really not worth factoring it in, anyway. Best way to shave weight you don't need is to stay with a straight X and or low X and low feature scope.