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Got it, One needs better than 20/20 vision to evaluate optics.
I'll keep that in mind.
PS: 1 fact is clear(no pun intended), the quality of any optic is solely reliant on the quality of your vision...if your vision isn't good/excellent, the ability to critique it's nuisances is limited at best.
And, I think you mean nuances. Although nuances can be nuisances if you're paying that much for glass!
To your point WRM, I am also wondering if theres a certain iteration that is best to have.
Another vote for the Fieldscopes here. But be a little careful, "Fieldscope" was a model name that applied to Nikon's best spotting scopes for a few decades. There are three major iterations of the 60mm Fieldscope; Fieldscope I, Fieldscope II, and Fieldscope III. Each of these is available in an ED version. I'm a little fuzzy on the details, but I believe that I and II were not fully multicoated, and not fully waterproof. So the Fieldscope III is the one you want in a 60mm scope. I believe it was introduced in the 1999. At that time it came with a 20-45 zoom eyepiece (MC1).
Nikon also made a 78mm Fieldscope; I think it was the big brother to the Fieldscope 2. It is not fully waterproof so may not be suitable for your needs.
In 2003, Nikon came out with the Fieldscope ED82. It is based on the Fieldscope III, just bigger. Also in 2003 they came out with the MC2 zoom eyepiece, which is 20-60x on the 60mm, and 25-75x on the 82mm.
The Nikon ED50 is a different animal from the larger scopes. It came out in 2008 so is the most modern design. But it uses a lot of plastic, and really the only things it shares with the bigger 60mm and 82mm Fieldscopes are the name and the quality optics. It's a great little scope and only weighs 20oz with the MC1 zoom (13-30x on this scope).
So, to sum up:
1) if you want a really light scope: ED50;
2) if you want a do-it-all scope: Fieldscope III ED with MC2 eyepiece (20-60x);
3) if you want the big kahuna: Fieldscope ED82 with MC2 eyepiece (25-75x).
I've got the 50 and the 82. I've compared the ED82 with a Swaro ATS80 HD, side-by-side, watching a ram two miles away on a cloudy day. My buddy and I both gave the edge to the ED82. You can find them used for way less than $1K if you're patient.