Yep no brainer price IMO under $500 shippedSWFA is have a July 4th sale, no 3x9 sadly, but the price on 3x15 is good. Might be something to check out.
Yep no brainer price IMO under $500 shippedSWFA is have a July 4th sale, no 3x9 sadly, but the price on 3x15 is good. Might be something to check out.
Yep no brainer price IMO under $500 shipped
I love the 3-15x42. Have it on 2 rifles.Thanks for the heads up. Not my favorite model of thiers, but ordered one anyway.
Might find it's way onto a CTR .223.
It's certainly a great scope by a lot of measures, and I wouldn't say no to using them anytime. Can't go wrong for $525. Can't go wrong for $700.I love the 3-15x42. Have it on 2 rifles.
Has anyone used that 3-15 for Midwest whitetails? Re-scoping a particular rifle that sees mostly whitetails but my main concern is reticle visibility during first/last night in the hardwoods. Ideally I'd buy the 3-9 but trying to work with what's available.
surely you meant tourette's?Gona get me a big Ole Vortex with turrets!
I would buy two of them right now, at full retail. And I’m not on any list. I’d wager they could make 1000 and sell them in pretty short order.A used SWFA 3-9 popped up in the classifieds about 15 mins ago (as of this posting) and went for full retail within minutes. Unsure of the statements above regarding low demand or small market share.
I was thinking the same about this scope reading this thread. I have never met anyone in person that ever mentioned SWFA and when I have mentioned I have one no one I told has ever heard of them.
This product [the 16-18oz FFP midpower scope with a 3-4x erector] is going to require vision, commitment, and understanding. The bulk of the market is going to need educated, and that’s never the short play. The good news: every scope you sell is for-profit advertising and a grass-roots infomercial. The one thing SWFA absolutely can NOT afford to do is what they are doing, running out of scopes.I’ve never seen one in the wild, and every single person who’s seen mine has asked what it was. Companies like Vortex and NF are probably selling as many scopes in a month as SWFA did in a year.
What they have going for them is that their scopes don't really have direct competition. For one, they have a long track record of ruggedness and reliable function. Secondly, they come in at a price point that's lower than other offerings.This product [the 16-18oz FFP midpower scope with a 3-4x erector] is going to require vision, commitment, and understanding. The bulk of the market is going to need educated, and that’s never the short play. The good news: every scope you sell is for-profit advertising and a grass-roots infomercial. The one thing SWFA absolutely can NOT afford to do is what they are doing, running out of scopes.
@Balderdash I’ll keep buying them, too, but they are tough to recommend to a new guy. Eventually the competition is gonna catch up.
I'm curious as well, but I don't see them in stock.A question that's been asked before, but I haven't seen really answered. Are the Ultralights similarly durable? I don't dial and they're cheaper, lighter, and in stock. Obviously weight savings come at a cost, but I don't know if that's in the internals or just the smaller tube/objective & lack of turrets.
I wouldn't buy a 3-15x for a brush/timber gun to begin with, not what it's designed for.I had the 3-15 and thought the reticle was absolutely terrible for low light or in the timber. It is way too faint for midwest whitetails in the brush unless you have incredible eyesight (which I don't).