To spotting scope or love life?

rratzlaff1490

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 25, 2013
Messages
209
Considering selling my swaro ats 20-60 spotter for a pair of nl 14’s and using my 10x50 ELs and Pures for a complete set up. I hate looking through spotting scopes and have only used my current spotter like 2 times in the last 4 years.

Thoughts, questions, concerns!!!
 
Joined
Dec 4, 2018
Messages
2,581
It’s a good idea. The maven 18s are also good glass and have a bit more reach if you’re worried about not having enough magnification
 
OP
R

rratzlaff1490

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 25, 2013
Messages
209
If you sit and glass for long periods and out past 600 yards, you will like the clarity, field of view, and magnification of the 15 EL, 12 or 14 NL Pures.

I run a 10x rangefinder and 15 EL. When I have the money I will buy the 14s.
No spotter in the setup, or any plans to add one?
 

hereinaz

WKR
Rokslide Sponsor
Joined
Dec 21, 2016
Messages
4,458
Location
Arizona
No spotter in the setup, or any plans to add one?
I have had spotters. I love them at the range, but never used them hunting. I really wanted to love my Kowa 554, and even tried to arrange my other glass so it would make sense to use on a hunt. I always went back to 10x and 15x. I have experimented enough, that I don't need to try anything else.

Friends have spotters that we use from the truck or short walks. I never really look through them, except to digiscope.

Apparently, you don't need the spotter to count points and check size, cause you've maybe used it twice. You aren't doing the things they excell at enough. Spotters are good for judging game at distance and for digiscoping long range shots. They are not really good for glassing for game unless you are a pirate and have one eye.

If you are stuck with the idea of keeping the spotter, there must be some idea or something holding you back, cause it's not reality. I know I have gotten stuck in that too.

Maybe this exercise will help you decide: Make a full throated defense of why you have thousands of dollars tied up in gear that you have used twice in four years, instead of buying a pair of binoculars you would use every time.
 

nphunter

WKR
Joined
Jul 27, 2016
Messages
2,084
Location
Oregon
I could never give up a spotter altogether because I use it too much. I did sell my ATC and my Meostar 15's to buy some NL14's though. I'm running some Razor 10's, NL14's and Meopta S2. I cannot due without a big spotter because I'm after big animals and hunt big country, I need to know what I'm going after and the spotter is the only way for me to do that. I tried going with the ATC to shed some weight but ultimately everytime that I took it into the field over the last couple of year I wished that I had my S2 instead. I have carried my S2, Meostar 15's and Razor in on my back multiple times and everytime I leave one of them I'm wishing that I had them.
My next purchase will most likely be a set of 8.5EL's for the larger FOV over the Razors, IMO there isn't a bino made that can replaced a good spotter. A person just needs to decide what is the most important to them.
 

Netherman

WKR
Joined
May 24, 2016
Messages
487
Location
Michigan
I don't think I could make the argument of dropping my spotter for something in the 15x class. I use it on ~50% of my western hunts and occasionally at home glassing summer bucks on bean fields with the kid. For my use case I'm currently planning to keep it and add a set of 15s (SLC or Meopta) or maybe talk myself into NL14s for the FOV.

For someone trying to decide big binos vs spotting scope I'd ask what hunts they do/planned to do and see what fit best. If I was only an archery elk guy I'd be selling the spotter with no regrets. For me I would have been better served with 15s first and then adding the spotter later as I'm not a point counter, but still see a need for both. One thing I'll add is that only a spotter can fill the spotter hole. You can substitute the 15s with a spotter it's just painful and inefficient.

Past three year hunt examples
2024
NM Elk - No use for spotter or 15s.
CO ELk - Used and needed the spotter 15s would have helped as well.

2023
MT Deer - Used the spotter 15s would have been better.
KS Deer - didn't use the spotter, might have used 15s.

2022
CO MZ Mule Deer - Used and would want a spotter
[no second tag due to point creep]

Future hunt plan
2025 [hopeful]
WY Antelope - expect to need and use the spotter. 15s would be helpful if glassing is longer than 10 capability.
KS Deer - Could live without either but 15s would be nice.
 
Joined
Feb 25, 2012
Messages
2,484
I really believe it depends on what you want to kill, and where you are hunting.

Most trophy hunters are going to use a spotter unless the terrain vegetation doesn’t really allow it.

Most opportunity hunters don’t need a spotter. Some use one though.
 

Macintosh

WKR
Joined
Feb 17, 2018
Messages
3,092
This is a no-brainer. The people saying to
keep it all USE their spotter. If this post was in the general forum, and you didnt ID what the gear was, but simply asked “i have this piece of non-safety gear that Ive used twice in the past 4 years, and I have a stand-in that does 80% of that that I use all the time, would you get rid of it?”…is there really anyone that would answer anything other than “if you dont use it, dont bring it”?
 

Hnthrdr

WKR
Joined
Jan 29, 2022
Messages
3,865
Location
The West
The fov on the ATC makes me love that spotter, generally fov is why I hate spotters. But yes Binos are always easier to look through.
 
Joined
Jun 7, 2023
Messages
817
Location
Wyoming
Big spotters are just dead weight to me afield. The only one I carry and use is a Nikon ED50 with fixed 27X wide angle lens. It weighs like a pound.

As for binos, that's trickier. I've owned Swaro 8x32 and 15x56 binos for the past 5 or so year. I loved this duo and wasn't planning on changing anything, but last fall, I used NL Pure 12x42s followed by SIG's 14x50mm ZULU6 HDX Pro. Holy cow. Image stabilization changes the equation.

I won't steer anyone away from high-end optics, but I would suggest trying this technology before dropping big money. If I were going on a dream hunt tomorrow and could use anything on the market, I would take IS binos.
 
Joined
Sep 11, 2017
Messages
1,691
Location
Three Forks, MT
I think what people are trying to figure out is WHY he isn’t using a spotter. Since lots of us consider it to be a must have piece of equipment.

When I’m glassing, it’s 10s or 15s on the tripod untill I see an animal. I will instantly switch to a spotter once I’ve seen something, in order to determine its size, ect. As soon as I decide it’s not something I’m interested in, im swapping back to the binos. If I was going to break it all down by percentages, I’d say I’m 98% of my time on binos. But that 2% on the spotter is giving me critical information.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Top