With all the interest in carbon fiber I’ve wondered why no scopes have come out with carbon fiber tubes. They do chip more easily, so maybe it’s a cosmetic thing, or maybe the force of over tightened rings just cracks the tube too often and the customer service phone would ring too much.
The current trend of magnification turning to get on target on low power and cranking it up for the shot seems more than a little problematic for anything under 500 to 600 yards, not only for introducing an extra error prone step, but for the time penalty. I get the biggest kick out of guys who say they only do it sometime - when things get stressful we all revert back to how we train. By the time my nephew lasers a shot, dinks with his phone, dinks with the tripod, dinks with a rear bag that’s not tall enough, cranks on the parallax knob, dials windage, screws up and redials windage, adds elevation for an easy 350 yard shot, then gets on target and starts to dial magnification, the dang deer has aged enough to grow an entire new set of larger antlers.
For out to 600 on a deer or antelope sized target I still think a simple 6x fixed scope with a simple elevation knob marked in 100 yard increments is all most people need. If the animal is 537 yards, the error in quickly estimating 1/3 between the 500 yard line and 600 yard line will not be the reason someone misses.
I’ve moved up to a fixed 8x this year, but it doesn’t seem to be a benefit over 6x since I can’t tell a difference in long range hits on big game size targets. More trigger time will tell. Either scope is only about 10 ounces.