Spend the money on great binoculars and a decent tripod. Skip buying a spotting scope until you have great 10x and 15x binoculars and a fleet of various weight tripods.
15x binoculars are way better on the range for calling shots in real time than a spotting scope hence their use in PRS. Video feed systems are way better for looking at targets in detail than spotting scopes especially on mirage heavy days. The idea of spotting shots on paper at longer range is silly when we have steel or shoot n see targets. Only niche competitive target shooters are going to need to call bullet holes on paper at 300, 600 or 1,000 yards.
Spotting scopes are niche tools for most people and they are pretty horrible to use until you spend $2k or so on one. I had a Vortex Razor 65 and it was poor in low light and too heavy for its marginal value. The older Kowa 55’s are the only spotting scope I would buy in your listed price range but they come with a very narrow FOV.
There are legitimate uses for spotting scopes but casual use every few seasons on a hunt is not one of them for me.
15x binoculars are way better on the range for calling shots in real time than a spotting scope hence their use in PRS. Video feed systems are way better for looking at targets in detail than spotting scopes especially on mirage heavy days. The idea of spotting shots on paper at longer range is silly when we have steel or shoot n see targets. Only niche competitive target shooters are going to need to call bullet holes on paper at 300, 600 or 1,000 yards.
Spotting scopes are niche tools for most people and they are pretty horrible to use until you spend $2k or so on one. I had a Vortex Razor 65 and it was poor in low light and too heavy for its marginal value. The older Kowa 55’s are the only spotting scope I would buy in your listed price range but they come with a very narrow FOV.
There are legitimate uses for spotting scopes but casual use every few seasons on a hunt is not one of them for me.