I have to ask…no variable power scopes on the list? If forced to add one, what would it be and where would it be in the hierarchy?
I’m probably not the best person for info on vintage variable power scopes. By the 1980’s, the reputation of variable scopes in general suffered from decades of rather problematic designs and poor construction. It was usually best to set the scope at a single power and keep it there.
Shooting 1980’s vintage Leupold VX-II variables (2x7, 3x9, 4x12) side by side with fixed scopes, there was a noticeable difference in how often the variables were out of whack. A stripped down variable scope tube shows the substantial cut in the tube for the power selector ring - that weak point is probably responsible for most of the VX-II’s problems.
The VX-III has a power selector cut, but it’s been reinforced much more than on the VX-II. I couldn’t remember when the VX-III came out, but a 1980 ad shows them, so that would be my choice for an old variable. Many early/mid 1980’s competition silhouette rifles in Wyoming had the 6.5x20 VX-III because turned down to 6.5 it was still a good hunting magnification, and turned up it could compete with the 24x fixed scopes.
The go-to coyote/prairie dog/rock chuck gun out of the early 1980’s is a 22-250 wearing a fixed 12x with target knobs. Once you get used to shooting little critters with the 12x, it makes a good open country deer/antelope scope. Toward the end of the 1980’s a 6x18 VX-II, or 6.5x20 VX-III had overtaken the fixed scopes for varmints. I still use a fixed 20x for small beady eyed varmints, but that’s because I’m a dinosaur, even by 1989 standards.
Burris was also a popular scope in some places, although I have no idea what they look like on the inside and few were seen on shelves - maybe the town I’m from just didn’t have a good Burris dealer, but they were mostly absent from our area.
My experience with Bushnell variables was short lived - a light 22 lr tipped over in relatively soft dirt and bent the rear bell a noticeable amount on my 4x12.
Steel tubed Weaver variables were rare - at least some of the designs were odd then and haven’t aged well since. When Weaver went all in on Japanese aluminum scopes, the eye relief wasn’t great so they weren’t a first choice of anyone I knew.
Redfield variables had good reputations for a little less money than a Leupold and those weird TV shaped rear objectives were seen quite often on hunting rifles. The eye relief wasn’t great and I don’t remember the image quality being anything special. The long variable power target scopes are quite interesting - a number of them popped up on varmint rifles.
I don’t know if that helped much. It might not have a vintage feel, but a 3.5x10 with target knobs pops up on eBay once in a while. The problem when trying to dial old variables is they don’t have the amount of travel that a 30 mm scope has. 1” fixed scopes have significantly more adjustment range.
