Southern Lights
WKR
Same question everyone has: I want the lightest scope possible that will hold zero in hard use conditions.
I have scopes weighing 20+ ozs. that can dial reliably. I am looking for a scope I can set at MPBR zero of 300 yards and know it will hold it no matter what. I'm not interested in a 20oz.+ scope as I'm all full there. I know NF, S&B, March, SWFA, etc. do that. But, I want much lighter as I don't need the dials.
I have narrowed down the choices to a Trijicon 3-9x40. This is based purely on reliability reviews seem to be good, they have a good rep for military optics, and the weight at 13ozs. I will be setting this for MPBR zero of about 300 yards so will rarely need to dial.
Anyone have any more information on this scope? Reliability? Etc? Again it will be set mostly at one zero, but maybe a rare dial if I wanted to take a poke at something up to 400 yards away. Otherwise the use case is 300-350 yards and under on a 270 rifle with holdovers never being more than a high shoulder shot. The rifle must hold zero is the primary concern when used in alpine conditions, on quad bikes, bad weather, etc. Cheers.
I have scopes weighing 20+ ozs. that can dial reliably. I am looking for a scope I can set at MPBR zero of 300 yards and know it will hold it no matter what. I'm not interested in a 20oz.+ scope as I'm all full there. I know NF, S&B, March, SWFA, etc. do that. But, I want much lighter as I don't need the dials.
I have narrowed down the choices to a Trijicon 3-9x40. This is based purely on reliability reviews seem to be good, they have a good rep for military optics, and the weight at 13ozs. I will be setting this for MPBR zero of about 300 yards so will rarely need to dial.
Anyone have any more information on this scope? Reliability? Etc? Again it will be set mostly at one zero, but maybe a rare dial if I wanted to take a poke at something up to 400 yards away. Otherwise the use case is 300-350 yards and under on a 270 rifle with holdovers never being more than a high shoulder shot. The rifle must hold zero is the primary concern when used in alpine conditions, on quad bikes, bad weather, etc. Cheers.