Schmidt and Bender Klassik 8x56mm Field Eval

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Formidilosus

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The S&B Klassik is Schmidt’s basic line of hunting scopes. Historically they have generally worked without much fuss for how most hunting scopes are used. This one is the fixed power 8x56mm made in Hungary model. According to S&B there are no differences other than country of manufacture between the German and Hungarian versions- and I have personally seen no difference.


Scope and Weight:

4F8E3F85-EB67-412D-B1D6-C1DEA7E603AB.jpeg





Turrets:

95A83BFA-7608-43B0-B03C-9EE5F6F22A86.jpeg

Elevation and windage turrets are their “Klassik CT” turret system- standard capped turrets except for the position indicator (small silver screw) that shows were you are in total travel.



Reticle:


This reticle is the A7 model-
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Parallax:


Parallax is fixed at 100m. I have not noticed any issues with parallax out to 400m with this scope.


Initial thoughts:

This scope is marketed as a specialized scope for hunting out of blinds or stands in very low light, or nighttime hunting. It is a rather large scope, however excels in this role. Those who have not seen or used one of the bigger fixed power “alpha” scopes do not grasp how good they are in extremely bad light.



Zeroing:

Initial zeroing was completed without much issue other than no measuring tape (reticle) in the scope.

Proofing the rifle and this lot of ammo was done using another scope, the 30 round group extreme spread was 1.37” at 100 yards.

The top dot. The “BS” is the first shot after boresight and and getting on paper at 25y. Then four rounds. Adjusted right .2 mil, and then ten rounds on bottom. Adjusted down .2 mils and went to the drop eval.

E42FE0AD-8DE1-47DC-9D4B-85EDA77034B9.jpeg



“Tracking”

Other than zeroing, not conducted.





Drop evaluation:

For an explanation see- Scope Field Eval Explanation and Standards


The “test” consists of three 18” drops on a mat- one left/right/top with a shot to check zero after each drop. Then the exact same thing repeated from 36”. Then three drops on all three sides for nine drops on the last part- 15 drops total. This is not “abuse”. The 18” drops are a joke really. The 36” start showing something. And when a scope make/model consistently goes through the whole thing without losing zero, failures in actual use are almost unheard of.

This one was conducted on packed, semi crusted snow.


The first 18” drop on left side showed no POI shift-

EE6CE3B6-22B8-4F2C-B1D4-0E8E98922801.jpeg


However the right side drop did cause a loss of zero totally off the 18” wide target. The top drop was off as well.

Initially 18 in-lbs was used on the ring caps, however could be seen that the scope slipped. So the scope and mounts were disassembled, and reassembled using 20 in-lbs, and rezeroed.

Center dot again-95B8B11D-1CC7-49C6-8B4C-8ABD27EF7127.jpeg


The zero was .2 mil low when the drop eval was started. This time all rounds impacted with baseline group size.

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Results:

The scope works. 18 in-lbs is the standard that I use for scopes as a starting point, and I right inline with most recommended torque values. However, I generally use 20-22 in-lbs because of scope slippage. After remounting, the scope functions and adjusts as it should and it holds zero.

Being that it passed everything, I will give my subjective views as far as eyebox, image quality, and overall use and feel in the next posts.
 
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Formidilosus

Formidilosus

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Eyebox and Eye Relief:

Eyebox is forgiving and excellent. Eye relief is in the specs, and is good to very good. It’s hard to describe to people that haven’t used one of these fixed large objective quality scopes how good they are to shoot with and look through. FOV, eyebox, and resolution/clarity are excellent. All of the fixed power Klassiks that I have used (6x, 7x, and 8x) have all exhibited the same traits.

Image Quality (glass):

Resolution is excellent. Color rendition is very good, and has more color “pop” than most and is still in the top of the market. Brightness is truly excellent. The view (color rendition) isn’t quite as good as the very best current scopes, but very, very close to them and in some ways the Klassiks are better in very low/no light. The reticle is bold enough to use without illumination.





Final Thoughts:

As a point blank 50’ish to 300’ish yard scope, for use in bad lighting conditions the 8x56mm Klassik is excellent. The Klassik series as a whole generally work and hold zero through even sometimes rough use- not bombproof, but solid, and the 7x50mm and 8x56mm are spectacular for stand hunting. If I could get this scope with a mil based reticle and turrets that allowed more than 3.2 mils of elevation adjustment, I would use it for most of my personal western hunting uses. As it stands, they are one of the few standard hunting scopes that are reliable and durable enough for my uses.
 
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