Tall_Vol44
FNG
I've read soooo many pages of threads on spotters, Swaro vs Leica vs meopta vs kowa etc... I understand the Swaro atx is probably the best optically on the market, but I don't think I necessarily need the very best of the best at that price point. I've also got a solid deal right now on new kowa's and from my reading I think they will be at least what I need (or want). There is a kowa dealer near where I live but they don't have anything in stock so my purchase is going to have to be blind.
My only experience with a spotter is with a Leupold kenai 20-60x80 that I use when I shoot at the range/long distance. Honestly Ive never been super happy with it & while it works at the range, idk if I would ever want to to try it hunting. At 60x it's not very sharp or clear, and it's not very bright at any magnification. I've never tried using it hunting because I'm just not sold that it is worth the size/weight to carry along. And I'm REALLY hoping that the kowa's will be a significant improvement over this Leupold. Just upgraded binos from viper hd 10x42 and Nikon my 8x42 to a maven B2 9x and a kowa Genesis 8x33. After upgrading my bipod and throwing the new binos and old spotter on it, I realized that my kenai spotter is not going to cut it going forward.
I live in Tennessee/Kentucky and primarily hunt there, but next year will start going out west to hunt whatever I can get tags for, &/or help buddy's that draw tags - & that will be at least once a year. Hopefully I'll be able to move west somewhere in 2 years, when the old lady is done with residency... Arizona, new Mexico, Colorado, or Utah are the short list states currently.
So my uses for this spotter will be literally a little bit of everything- range use, vehicle glassing, glassing from large comfy hunting blinds, & eventually backcountry/backpack hunting, and for anything and everything I can get an opportunity to hunt where a spotter would be advantageous to have.
Currently the farm I hunt has the very large power lines dissecting the 500 acres and I'm only limited in range to what I can comfortably shoot. There have been many, many, many times in the evenings where If I could've identified the deer as a big/shooter buck, I could have easily closed in and gotten a comfortable shot. But without knowing for sure, I would have to cross through feeding plots to close the distance thus ruining chances if something were about to pop out closer.
The yardage where my current optics began to fail me in darker conditions were probably around 400-500 or so. I could make out antlers, but couldn't tell if it had 6-8 points or 12-14 points... Just antlers or no antlers. So my immediate hunting uses will be for that, but again plan on using it for everything in the future when opportunity arises.
I also understand that for my current uses this level of spotter is completely overkill, but I'm looking forward and have decided that the buy once cry once is the best action to take for this purchase.
I'm not married yet, but that will happen probably sooner than later and I want my nice toys purchased before that.
Reading all I have, it sounds like the 55 series might not cut it in low light for what I'm wanting, but the price, weight, and reviews are attractive.
My next thoughts are:
1) is the 88 series really worth $600 more than the 77 series?
And
B) is the size/weight of the 88 close enough to the 77 to make that aspect a non issue when I start to backpack hunt? I realize it's like 6ish ounces heavier and maybe an inch longer. (But I've never back pack hunted before, and ounces do equal pounds.
I've done a lot of back country fly fishing and from that I learned some things are worth the extra weight and some aren't...)
Money isn't a huge concern, but less is more and if the 77 series will do everything I want and more, I don't really want to drop another $600 on the 88 series. I feel like there's a point of diminishing returns somewhere... Just not sure where that line is.
I think I've covered everything, and being an over-analyzer, I've thought about this way too much. I'm looking forward to hearing opinions and experiences from everyone & thanks in advance!
My only experience with a spotter is with a Leupold kenai 20-60x80 that I use when I shoot at the range/long distance. Honestly Ive never been super happy with it & while it works at the range, idk if I would ever want to to try it hunting. At 60x it's not very sharp or clear, and it's not very bright at any magnification. I've never tried using it hunting because I'm just not sold that it is worth the size/weight to carry along. And I'm REALLY hoping that the kowa's will be a significant improvement over this Leupold. Just upgraded binos from viper hd 10x42 and Nikon my 8x42 to a maven B2 9x and a kowa Genesis 8x33. After upgrading my bipod and throwing the new binos and old spotter on it, I realized that my kenai spotter is not going to cut it going forward.
I live in Tennessee/Kentucky and primarily hunt there, but next year will start going out west to hunt whatever I can get tags for, &/or help buddy's that draw tags - & that will be at least once a year. Hopefully I'll be able to move west somewhere in 2 years, when the old lady is done with residency... Arizona, new Mexico, Colorado, or Utah are the short list states currently.
So my uses for this spotter will be literally a little bit of everything- range use, vehicle glassing, glassing from large comfy hunting blinds, & eventually backcountry/backpack hunting, and for anything and everything I can get an opportunity to hunt where a spotter would be advantageous to have.
Currently the farm I hunt has the very large power lines dissecting the 500 acres and I'm only limited in range to what I can comfortably shoot. There have been many, many, many times in the evenings where If I could've identified the deer as a big/shooter buck, I could have easily closed in and gotten a comfortable shot. But without knowing for sure, I would have to cross through feeding plots to close the distance thus ruining chances if something were about to pop out closer.
The yardage where my current optics began to fail me in darker conditions were probably around 400-500 or so. I could make out antlers, but couldn't tell if it had 6-8 points or 12-14 points... Just antlers or no antlers. So my immediate hunting uses will be for that, but again plan on using it for everything in the future when opportunity arises.
I also understand that for my current uses this level of spotter is completely overkill, but I'm looking forward and have decided that the buy once cry once is the best action to take for this purchase.
I'm not married yet, but that will happen probably sooner than later and I want my nice toys purchased before that.
Reading all I have, it sounds like the 55 series might not cut it in low light for what I'm wanting, but the price, weight, and reviews are attractive.
My next thoughts are:
1) is the 88 series really worth $600 more than the 77 series?
And
B) is the size/weight of the 88 close enough to the 77 to make that aspect a non issue when I start to backpack hunt? I realize it's like 6ish ounces heavier and maybe an inch longer. (But I've never back pack hunted before, and ounces do equal pounds.
I've done a lot of back country fly fishing and from that I learned some things are worth the extra weight and some aren't...)
Money isn't a huge concern, but less is more and if the 77 series will do everything I want and more, I don't really want to drop another $600 on the 88 series. I feel like there's a point of diminishing returns somewhere... Just not sure where that line is.
I think I've covered everything, and being an over-analyzer, I've thought about this way too much. I'm looking forward to hearing opinions and experiences from everyone & thanks in advance!