Sig Zulu thoughts?

Joined
Sep 26, 2024
Messages
51
Looking to upgrade my binos I was running some vortex 10x42s and they’re the crossfires so it’s not the greatest glass but they get the job done but I do have really shaky hands and have been looking at the Sig Zulus for the image stabilization feature specifically the 12x42s and wanted to know if anyone has ran them and what they think about them?
 

chicoredneck

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jul 2, 2018
Messages
146
Location
Nevada
They are the way of the future. My wife ran 16x42 zulu6s this year and out glassed everyone. I prefer the 12x42 myself because the exit pupil is larger.

I’ve looked threw the new 50mm zulu6s, and they are better and worth the premium price I think.
 
OP
AlwaysChasinTailNHorns
Joined
Sep 26, 2024
Messages
51
I dont know where you're hunting whitetails but 12x would be way too much for me. I tried some of the zulus out and they are awesome.
I hunt a lot of big woods in hill country you can see rather far and I also go out west every year and hunt as well so wanting something that checks all the boxes for where I hunt and to be honest the 10x42s usually do fine for seeing animals but there’s been plenty of times I’m setup and can see bucks cruising on hillsides or ridges in early morning and I can tell they’re bucks but don’t have enough mag to get an intimate look at the rack like I’m wanting and I’m sure the fact that I’m using cheaper glass has something to do with that as well and my shakiness from my hands.
 
OP
AlwaysChasinTailNHorns
Joined
Sep 26, 2024
Messages
51
They are the way of the future. My wife ran 16x42 zulu6s this year and out glassed everyone. I prefer the 12x42 myself because the exit pupil is larger.

I’ve looked threw the new 50mm zulu6s, and they are better and worth the premium price I think.
Awesome! Thanks for the input I’m curious what noticeable differences did you see in the new 50mm 6’s?
 

SloppyJ

WKR
Joined
Feb 24, 2023
Messages
2,027
I hunt a lot of big woods in hill country you can see rather far and I also go out west every year and hunt as well so wanting something that checks all the boxes for where I hunt and to be honest the 10x42s usually do fine for seeing animals but there’s been plenty of times I’m setup and can see bucks cruising on hillsides or ridges in early morning and I can tell they’re bucks but don’t have enough mag to get an intimate look at the rack like I’m wanting and I’m sure the fact that I’m using cheaper glass has something to do with that as well and my shakiness from my hands.

Well sounds like you have a good use case for them. I know in our deer woods here youre lucky to see 100yds. I still carry my 10ks with me though for sneaking on field edges.
 

Scoot

WKR
Joined
Nov 13, 2012
Messages
1,691
Yep, they are awesome! I'm a bowhunter, so the ability to hold them steady with one hand (while my bow holds the other) is a game changer. 12x would be too much for my whitetail needs, but it sounds like you understand the pros and cons of that choice.
 
Joined
Jun 7, 2023
Messages
829
Location
Wyoming
I've been a Swarovski snob for years. I looked down on image-stabilized (IS) binos and considered them a gimmick for hunting. From a rocking boat at sea, maybe they made sense, but they weren't for me.

For the past 5 years, my primary glass has been Swaro 8x32 and 15x56, so I'm accustomed to alpha-level optics. Earlier this month, I used a set of 12x42 NL Pures on a deer and antelope hunt. They're the best optics I've used. True brilliance. Offhand, I was a bit jittery, but on a tripod, they gave me the vision of an eagle.

After the hunt, I've began testing the SIG ZULU6 HDX PRO 14x50 to see what all the chatter is about. Holy $#17! They will never compete optically with Swaro, but for handheld use, they are marvelous instruments, almost a cheat code for stable glassing. I agree with others who say this is the future. Hell, it's probably the present.

I'll take it a step further: not using IS binos is likely a handicap for hunting. The only question is what power to use. I don't know the answer to that.
 

swavescatter

Pain in the butt!
Joined
Apr 3, 2021
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1,378
BLUF: New HDX Pro's are overpriced garbage. Save your money and get the regular HDX.

 
Joined
Feb 17, 2025
Messages
16
I've been a Swarovski snob for years. I looked down on image-stabilized (IS) binos and considered them a gimmick for hunting. From a rocking boat at sea, maybe they made sense, but they weren't for me.

For the past 5 years, my primary glass has been Swaro 8x32 and 15x56, so I'm accustomed to alpha-level optics. Earlier this month, I used a set of 12x42 NL Pures on a deer and antelope hunt. They're the best optics I've used. True brilliance. Offhand, I was a bit jittery, but on a tripod, they gave me the vision of an eagle.

After the hunt, I've began testing the SIG ZULU6 HDX PRO 14x50 to see what all the chatter is about. Holy $#17! They will never compete optically with Swaro, but for handheld use, they are marvelous instruments, almost a cheat code for stable glassing. I agree with others who say this is the future. Hell, it's probably the present.

I'll take it a step further: not using IS binos is likely a handicap for hunting. The only question is what power to use. I don't know the answer to that.
Have you tried the HDX vs the HDX pro? And if so what differences have you see?
 
Joined
Aug 16, 2022
Messages
1
As someone with slight hand shakes I used the zulu 16's this year and will never go back to standard. Packed in a spotter for first hunt of the year and ended up prefering the zulu's and didnt pack the spotter the rest of the year... worked awesome for one handed quick spotting while run n gun mule deer and worked exceptionally well for picking out deer movement in thick bluff country brush while whitetail hunting.

Downside is the lowlight quality is still not as good as a decent pair of leopolds or similar..
 

WCB

WKR
Joined
Jun 12, 2019
Messages
3,691
My dad has REALLY shaky hands. Has been tested for everything you can think of and they just say he has involuntary tremors. To the point he can barley write his name. He won a pair of the 16x Zulus and absolutely loves them. For probably 3-4 years now he couldn't use anything over an 8x bino and even then he shook so much he had hard time registering any detail.

Optically they aren't the greatest glass and you will probably lose a few minutes of glassing but I might pick up a pair for on the move hunts where I also might be looking out to distance. great stabilization off hand or breathing heavy and don't need to pull out the tripod for short to medium length glassing.
 
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