In my state I hunt white tails with a shotgun and I’m putting together a new set up. Picking everyone’s brain in case I’m missing a good option. We use slugs for white tail in nj, shots are 100 yards or less, generally less. Looking for a low mag scope. Illumination is a must for what I’d like. I can use irons on the barrel but prefer an optic with a crosshair. I’m thinking either sig 2.5-8 Sierra 3 or primary arms slx 1-6 with the nova dot. Magnification is less of a concern as long at it starts out very low, but sometimes it’s nice to have alittle bit over just a dot. Any thoughts on lpvo vs a 3-9 or something similar. No need to spend a lot for this application as long as it’ll hold up to 12 gauge recoil.
My dad, 4 brothers, and I all grew up in a slug only state. Though last year ours approved single-shot straight wall cartridges. I still hunt with a slug.
Not to mention all my hunting buddies all shoot slugs, so I've seen and shot and used almost everything out there. My older brother and dad first started with smooth bore, iron sights with Remington Sluggers that were pie plate accuracy at 50 yds.
Then I came along with a Hastings Rifled barrel on my 20ga Remington 1100 with a red sot and it was a game changer to double our effective range to 100 yds as an early teen. Within 2 yrs my whole family switched over to rifles bbls and red dots.
Them red dots were perfectly fine til they got battered and abused by bush whacking teens and eventually they chewed thru batteries to quickly. So I switched over to a tradition variable powered scope. I shot a butt load of deer with this red dot and grey box Winchester sabots.
I've shot everything from Nikons Prostaffs, Monarchs, Buckmasters and Slug Hunter scopes. I've also shot the newer Redfield scopes when they came back and made in the Philippines by Leupold.
Currently on my 20ga Rem 1100 I have a Nikon Prostaff 2-7x32 with a standard duplex reticle. My 12ga Rem 1187 has a Burris DropTine 2-7x32 with the subtensions that I can go out to 200 yds.
With my 20ga, I've dropped a coyote at 143 yds with Hornady SSTs (I've since switched to Rem Accutips because I shot one deer with the SSTs and it pancaked as fast as csn be right in the vitals.) I did it with that Nikon 2-7x duplex scope.
Last year, I dropped a nice 4 yr old buck at 153 yards with one slug with Federal 3" Barnes Tipped slug with the Burris Drop Tine 2-7x and my dad dropped a 12pt 164" buck just 30 seconds before I dropped mine. My dad killed the 12pt and the other buck ran towards me and was broadside at 153 yds. It was 3:30pm on the last day of gun season.
My dad was using my 20ga and I had my 12ga. Both performed great.
However my brother has a Leupold Ultimate Slam 3-9 on his 20ga 870 and it's a flat out TACK DRIVER! Like I'm talking 1.5" groups at 100 yds and MAN is that Leupy a nice scope.
When my Nikon or Burris takes a crap. Leupolds Ultimat Slam is probably going to be the answer.
However, this year I got scoped and broke my nose on my biggest 10 pt. (It was my own fault for not holding the gun properly, but he came right behind me at 10 yds and busted me in the stand. I didn't have time to get the gun in my shouldee, and I didn't have time to move, so with the gun on my hip, I just brought the gun under my arm pit, and at 7x power had to find him in the scope as the shadow bubble in the scope was bouncing all around. As soon as I found his vitals, I pulled the trigger and got smacked in the face! All in a matter of 5 seconds. Totally worth a broken nose, but that wasn't the scopes fault!)
However, I can say that a longer eye relief is recommended. Even sighting my 12ga in, she kicks like a mule and often times knocks my glasses.
Nikon doesn't make their Slug Hunter anymore. But that Crimson Trace scope looks promising with a 5 inch eye relief! That's the first time I've ever read about that scope. I'd certainly be interested in seeing that thing and it's performance.
Currently the Leupold Ultimate Slam is what I'd buy next, but it doesn't have the eye relief that the Crimson Trace listed above has.
I wouldn't worry too much about an illuminated reticle. With the recoil of the slug, that's just one more thing that could go wrong and anything that's going to be able to take that type of beating AND be a quality scope, good reticle, cleae glass, is probably going to to cost a lot. And by that, I'd imagine the quality it would be a Dangerous Game African Safari type scope by someone like Trijicon.