Unfortunately 6x is not the best for a spot and stalk rifle on the low end but being inexperienced for the long range game I chose to go with the 6-24 over the 4-16. I know guys shoot out to a thousand with 10 or even 6x but I wanted to be able to place a shot more precisely. I was worried about covering too much of the target with the lower magnification. Everything is a compromise and if it were a general purpose rifle or dark timber rifle I would have gone a different route. I set these rifles up for open country long shots. We mainly moved through the country we were hunting very slowly trying to spot animals before they spotted us so we could build a solid shooting position and wait for the animal to open up the shot angle we wanted to take. Any time we came over a rise or neared a canyon we would take a couple steps and scan with the binos, expose a small bit more and repeat until we could evaluate the entire area and either make a plan for a shot or move on. Of the 4 bucks we harvested last fall only 1 of them knew we were there before the shot. The one that was aware was spooked as we were trying to make a play on a different buck. For the record there were 4 of us Michigan boys hunting so nobody jumps to conclusions about anything illegal.Very nice shooting Matt. I have that same V4 on my credmoor chassis target toy & love it but isn’t 6X too much for you at the bottom end in close?
I think your son would be well suited with the combo. I thought long and hard about which scope to go with but went higher magnification in the end. If one pops up at 50 yards it will definitely not be ideal but I run a straight 6x on my 350 legend in Michigan's southern shotgun/straight wall cartridge zone and have had no trouble the last couple years. I really should have gone with the 4-16 on the second rifle just so I had options if I end up with an elk tag in the next few years.I’m dragging around a 10 lb 300 Weatherby with the Zeiss HD5 in 3-15x50 Z800 reticle. The glass is close but not quite V4 clarity but that reticle is perfect for the Weatherby trajectory. We practice to 800 yards & the little 1’wide x 2’ tall metal silhouettes are in trouble all the way out to 800 with the reticle shooting off the pack seated. My son is saving for a Tikka/Zeiss combo like yours himself. Unless you get one of those whitetail shots you are all set.