I found this to be true and honestly after my experience with Vortex, would not take a free Vortex item. Not worth the pain and stress.There is a reason Vortex pushes that warranty more than any other company...its cause they know you will need it with their stuff.
It should be a red flag when a companies advertisement is mostly how great their warranty is.I found this to be true and honestly after my experience with Vortex, would not take a free Vortex item. Not worth the pain and stress.
Yea.... My experience was so bad wirh Vortex, the scope almost didn't even make it home with me, I was just too tired to stop and find a trash can on the way home from elk camp.It should be a red flag when a companies advertisement is mostly how great their warranty is.
Snap on has a great warranty, but you don’t see it plastered all over their ads. They tell you how good the tool is(and most of the time it’s pretty damn good if not the best) and the features of it.
It reminds me of old school Kia. I’m not sure how the newer ones are, but I remember most of the radio advertisement was about how long the warranty is... like what are you guys selling here? Sounds like a warranty instead of the car. Wonder why?
The one that gets me is the binoculars burnt up in a house fire... pretty sure most sane people have homeowners.
Very much agree. I have slowly been stocking up on them personally. The comfort is unreal.Mostly fits the bill here - socks. I only wear darn tough merino wool socks (every day). But, Navy issued steel toe boots don’t breathe and aren’t very comfortable. So the socks are well worth it.
Zeiss binos, spent a grand on them the week before I got married in 02, was sweatin for a few days about spending that much on hunting g gear, but all these years later they have proven a wise investment.Saw a topic about spotters and I started thinking about gear I wish I would’ve spent good money on in the first place.
My #1 is that I should’ve started with a custom action. I started building on a rem 700 AAC 308, then traded it off in the end at a significant loss. I now have a few purpose built rifles that initially cost more, but will maintain their value (though they’ll probably never be sold).
My #2 is a heavy stainless 556 suppressor. My first NFA buy I was trying to save money and went cheap. Dumb thing to do on a lifetime purchase.
Though these are expensive life lessons, I would’ve saved $ in the long run.
So what’s your biggest woulda shoulda coulda?
A buddy bought one of those cheap Chinese tents That came a part on him on a hunt. My USA made Tarptent is as good as the day I bought it about 18 years ago.Though these are expensive life lessons, I would’ve saved $ in the long run.
So what’s your biggest woulda shoulda coulda?
“Too tired to find a trash can” made me laugh pretty hard. I’m gonna stow that for future use with your permission.Yea.... My experience was so bad wirh Vortex, the scope almost didn't even make it home with me, I was just too tired to stop and find a trash can on the way home from elk camp.
Another huge regret I've had is boots. Cheap boots are a waste of life. Buy the very best boots you can possibly afford, that's probably rhe hardest lesson I ever learned. Except Crispi, F Crispi boots.
By all means. You could even go buy a Vortex scope, binos, anything really, and live the tragedy yourself if you really need some depression and regret in life.“Too tired to find a trash can” made me laugh pretty hard. I’m gonna stow that for future use with your permission.