CorbLand
WKR
- Joined
- Mar 16, 2016
- Messages
- 9,707
Read this whole thread and this is basically what I was going to post.Nothing is special about a scope that holds zero. Even a leupold. Thats the minimum requirement to be considered a quality scope. The point is that for a decent number of people, some brands and models are more prone to losing zero for no apparent reason. Some people seem to have lightning strike 2, 3, 4 times in a row with leupold, vortex and some others, while they dont have problems as commonly with NF, trij, s&b, swfa and a few others, and where I have firsthand knowledge the eval results align closely with my experience on that. You buy any scope, you take your chances, this is simply a relatively objective way to stack the odds in your favor should you ever need or want a more reliable optic. It does not mean every leupold is junk, nor does it mean every nightforce is perfect. Why is this so hard?
When it comes to scopes I can do without the best glass, looks, feel, etc. What I cannot do without is it holding zero. Give me a 2X4 with a barrel and scope duct taped to it. As long as it can repeatably kill something at 500 yards, I will take it.