You could with a Gladiator Rubicon…just sayin’And I'd never buy a rubicon, how in the HELL am I supposed to load the doe whole that I just shot from the shoulder of the road into that without messing up the interior???
You could with a Gladiator Rubicon…just sayin’And I'd never buy a rubicon, how in the HELL am I supposed to load the doe whole that I just shot from the shoulder of the road into that without messing up the interior???
You can search within a thread, and you can send one in for testing!I didn’t read through the 25 pages to see if anyone requested Huskemaw scopes. But I have 2 and would be real curious to see how they pass. I trust 1 totally, suspect a gremlin might be living in the other
Thanks, looks like I’m the first to request this. So if I send in the 4-16x44 (which I suspect) and that fails, then I have to question the sanity of keeping the 5-20x50 also?! Lol, better to know thoughYou can search within a thread, and you can send one in for testing!
It’s not a easy decision.Thanks, looks like I’m the first to request this. So if I send in the 4-16x44 (which I suspect) and that fails, then I have to question the sanity of keeping the 5-20x50 also?! Lol, better to know though
I’m not trying to be argumentative. Members often have a similar experience and sentiment. For those who have had their scopes bounce around, etc and still hold zero, why is there a reluctance to have the scope tested? I can think several logical answers - including not knowing the testers, not wanting to lose a scope on a rifle (during hunting season or otherwise), etc. It’s an honest question, and I believe the last time I tried to phrase it I failed, as I remember the reply as being pretty argumentative or defensive. So it could be a poor effort on my part.I'd also like to see Huskemaw tested, but I don't want to pull any of mine off for testing to bad.
For what it's worth I have 6 Huskemaw scopes now. I've had good luck with them dialing reliably and have been replacing other scopes with them as funds allow. I like the covered turrets for my use, and the weight isn't bad for a scope I trust to dial. The glass isn't as good as some, but it's been good enough.
One evening my buddy Dean and I compared his Swaro Z5 3-18x44 with my Huskemaw 3-12x42, both scopes set on 12x. We pulled the bolts out of our guns so there was no chance of anything going wrong and were looking at some of our calves through them as the sun went down from a steady rest on my deck. His was brighter, but we both agreed we could not take a shot with his Swaro we couldn't have with my Huskemaw. For practical use there wasn't much difference. The 5-20x50 is better in low light than the 3-12x or 4-16x as you'd expect with the larger lens
I have 5-20's on my whitetail rifles, 4-16's on my coyote 243 and my 300 win for AK or out west. My coyote AR has a 3-12x and I have a short barreled 308 with a 1-6x. The 243 especially spends a lot of time getting bounced around in a UTV or feed truck, it has not had an easy life. I've been happy with how they hold zero.
Thanks for replying and those reasons make complete sense to me. I don't know anything about the Huskemaw, so I don't know if that would be one everyone desires to have tested.No offense taken. For me it’s simply that they are all on rifles and have caused no issues. If I take one off I have to spend ammo re-zeroing. Ammo and components have been hard to come by and expensive lately. The 308 not as much, but I don’t know if a 1-6x is what would be best to test? The AR is using a Hornady Superformance ammo with the 73gr ELD-M thats discontinued. When I run out I have to start over on that gun.
A lesser reason is re-mounting the scopes. All have been on the rifles for a while with no issue. I read Form’s post on mounting a scope and followed it. While not likely, removing one and re-mounting it adds a potential problem. If I don’t get it level, over torque something, etc. it’s just a if its not broke don’t fix it situation. If I had one laying around loose I’d be way more willing to test it.
If the 1-6x would work I’d be willing to pulll it off?
Do you know where huskemaw scopes are made?I didn’t read through the 25 pages to see if anyone requested Huskemaw scopes. But I have 2 and would be real curious to see how they pass. I trust 1 totally, suspect a gremlin might be living in the other
Do you know where huskemaw scopes are made?
On Huskemaw's warranty page;
"Notice: the use of a recoil reducing rest may void warranty" that would be a red flag of durability issues for me.
Good advice in theory and maybe reality. Same thing in auto racing with "safer walls". Impact is absorbed over a longer period of time. Run the same car into the same wall if concrete and it's much more damaging to the car and driver. Recoil force is generated, it may not seem like it's moving the sled but the recoil force is there. It has to go somewhere. If it gets sent back through the rifle then it transmits to the scope, scope internals are getting pounded in a way that is not typical.I overhead a guy at a gun counter say that lead sleds destroy scopes. Made no sense to me. He said that when a gun isn't allowed to recoil all the recoil goes into a scope.
Recoil is g-forces created, if the gun isn't moving, there's no g-forces.
Now bedding and lug areas I can see taking heavy abuse, but I don't get the idea it will damage a scope. Only if I guess the gun isn't held properly and it does recoil some distance and then encounters a hard stop.
I chocked it up to being the same as so much other gun counter advice.
Good advice in theory and maybe reality. Same thing in auto racing with "safer walls". Impact is absorbed over a longer period of time. Run the same car into the same wall if concrete and it's much more damaging to the car and driver. Recoil force is generated, it may not seem like it's moving the sled but the recoil force is there. It has to go somewhere. If it gets sent back through the rifle then it transmits to the scope, scope internals are getting pounded in a way that is not typical.
No offense taken. For me it’s simply that they are all on rifles and have caused no issues. If I take one off I have to spend ammo re-zeroing. Ammo and components have been hard to come by and expensive lately. The 308 not as much, but I don’t know if a 1-6x is what would be best to test? The AR is using a Hornady Superformance ammo with the 73gr ELD-M thats discontinued. When I run out I have to start over on that gun.
A lesser reason is re-mounting the scopes. All have been on the rifles for a while with no issue. I read Form’s post on mounting a scope and followed it. While not likely, removing one and re-mounting it adds a potential problem. If I don’t get it level, over torque something, etc. it’s just a if its not broke don’t fix it situation. If I had one laying around loose I’d be way more willing to test it.
If the 1-6x would work I’d be willing to pulll it off?