And folks who read about that on Rokslide and for whom drop testing is important look elsewhere for optics.I made that suggestion to Tract and offered to have my replacement (new) sent directly to Ryan. They declined.
And folks who read about that on Rokslide and for whom drop testing is important look elsewhere for optics.I made that suggestion to Tract and offered to have my replacement (new) sent directly to Ryan. They declined.
Agreed. I sold my Tracts.And folks who read about that on Rokslide and for whom drop testing is important look elsewhere for optics.
For example, the Vortex Gen III. To be clear, my best guess is that their scopes do not hold zero and it is a glorfied paper weight per the testing you did. I think what you guys are doing is the most important accounability testing being done and i will continue to send money every month.What scope that has been evaled is causing you concern?
Good idea. But unless manufacturers send in new scopes, or people who lend their scopes for testing decide to do so before having used them, I don’t see this happening. I also don’t believe many (any?) of the manufacturers are responding to these, other than to take shots at the methodology, or Form (or both).For example, the Vortex Gen III. To be clear, my best guess is that their scopes do not hold zero and it is a glorfied paper weight per the testing you did. I think what you guys are doing is the most important accounability testing being done and i will continue to send money every month.
My contention is that you have stated in the past that part of the reason to go through all the testing is to hold the manufacturers feet to the fire and make them make changes. To do this, i think they need to find the tests infallable.
If i worked at Vortex I would say "this tests proves nothing about our Flagship Scope given the abuse the scope took prior to Form's test"
In Justin's artcle https://www.rokslide.com/vortex-razor-hd-gen-iii-6-36x56-ffp-review/ he hits the scope multiple times with a deadblow hammer then shoots presumably thousands of rounds through at PRS matches before he sends it to you guys. We have no idea how hard Justin hit the thing with the hammer. we have no idea how many rounds that irrector rod has on it, we have no idea how many times justin ever dropped the rifle off the top of a baricade on to concrete etc.
I just want Vortex and the other companies to have less wiggle room.
For example, the Vortex Gen III. To be clear, my best guess is that their scopes do not hold zero and it is a glorfied paper weight per the testing you did. I think what you guys are doing is the most important accounability testing being done and i will continue to send money every month.
My contention is that you have stated in the past that part of the reason to go through all the testing is to hold the manufacturers feet to the fire and make them make changes. To do this, i think they need to find the tests infallable.
If i worked at Vortex I would say "this tests proves nothing about our Flagship Scope given the abuse the scope took prior to Form's test"
In Justin's artcle https://www.rokslide.com/vortex-razor-hd-gen-iii-6-36x56-ffp-review/ he hits the scope multiple times with a deadblow hammer then shoots presumably thousands of rounds through at PRS matches before he sends it to you guys. We have no idea how hard Justin hit the thing with the hammer. we have no idea how many rounds that irrector rod has on it, we have no idea how many times justin ever dropped the rifle off the top of a baricade on to concrete etc.
I just want Vortex and the other companies to have less wiggle room.
To do this, i think they need to find the tests infallable.
Sure, but the test itself does that. By the time the scope goes through the drop eval and has a few hundred rounds on it, it already has more use than most "hunting" scopesI'm quite happy to see scopes that are well used tested, and I'd actively encourage it. My concern isn't just that my new scope fails to hold zero. I want to know that my well used 5 year old scope holds zero too. If it can't hold zero once it's used then its of no practical use to me.
You can when you propperly apply the Scientific Method, which Form has done. The only variable keeping the test from being repeatable is the source of the scopes being tested. i.e. if someone wanted to repeat this tesing and come to the same conclusion, they would also need a scope banged up by JustinYou can't make a test infallable.
A manufactor can and has tried to come up with excuses to invalidate the tests on any number of reasons before.
You learn real fast who cares and who wants to make excuses and give lip service.
You can when you propperly apply the Scientific Method, which Form has done. The only variable keeping the test from being repeatable is the source of the scopes being tested. i.e. if someone wanted to repeat this tesing and come to the same conclusion, they would also need a scope banged up by Justin
Yesssss!
That one has been beat to hell. It passed everything including the 3,000 rounds without ever losing zero.
Got shot again today after it replaced two back to back failed scopes.
Boresight, one round, adjust then three rounds in the bottom dot, adjust, then three rounds in the top dot.
View attachment 625055
Thanks to you the trijicons will be my next purchase for two rifles.That one has been beat to hell. It passed everything including the 3,000 rounds without ever losing zero.
Got shot again today after it replaced two back to back failed scopes.
Boresight, one round, adjust then three rounds in the bottom dot, adjust, then three rounds in the top dot.
View attachment 625055
I just donated to the cause and a good cause it is.Nothing definitive.
The scope I sent to Form was a replacement after the first one didn't hold zero after my initial tests. It wasn't dropped or hammered prior to him getting it.For example, the Vortex Gen III. To be clear, my best guess is that their scopes do not hold zero and it is a glorfied paper weight per the testing you did. I think what you guys are doing is the most important accounability testing being done and i will continue to send money every month.
My contention is that you have stated in the past that part of the reason to go through all the testing is to hold the manufacturers feet to the fire and make them make changes. To do this, i think they need to find the tests infallable.
If i worked at Vortex I would say "this tests proves nothing about our Flagship Scope given the abuse the scope took prior to Form's test"
In Justin's artcle https://www.rokslide.com/vortex-razor-hd-gen-iii-6-36x56-ffp-review/ he hits the scope multiple times with a deadblow hammer then shoots presumably thousands of rounds through at PRS matches before he sends it to you guys. We have no idea how hard Justin hit the thing with the hammer. we have no idea how many rounds that irrector rod has on it, we have no idea how many times justin ever dropped the rifle off the top of a baricade on to concrete etc.
I just want Vortex and the other companies to have less wiggle room.