S-3 ranch
WKR
I just need a 55-60 lbs of recoil test for the 375 ruger & 416 Remington
the leupold 2-7 on tally quick detachment rings have held zero fine for me
the leupold 2-7 on tally quick detachment rings have held zero fine for me
This analogy assumes there isn't an independent crash test rating being done on all vehicles....kinda like an independent drop test guy on a forumCustomer on car lot “Can we take it out for a test drive?”
Salesman “Why yes of course!”
Customer purposely hits a parked car and airbags deploy
Salesman “Why in the world did you do that? Are you nuts?”
Customer “No, I’m a disciple of Form’s drop test on Rok Slide.”
I think it was just a joke but haven't some on this forum suggested everyone should test their setups, too?This analogy assumes there isn't an independent crash test rating being done on all vehicles....kinda like an independent drop test guy on a forum
Small sample size, lack of formal statistics and analytics training, and confirmation bias come to mind as the top three contributors to these opinions (this goes far beyond scopes).
This is what I too thought the drop tests were modeling. A prediction of function over time. Not will it fail if I fall.An important bit of distinction is missing from most of the threads that argue incessantly about drop testing. It is NOT about falling with your rifle. It is to predict which scopes will withstand the cumulative effects of recoil and general use, and still function. The same scopes that fail the drop test, have also been found to fail after just being used as a scope. So the tests are like a free time machine ride into the future.
A little different they didn't take a used car and run it Into a wall and then test for reliabilityCatching up here.
Just something noteworthy - JD powers and consumer reports evaluated, tested cars/trucks for a variety of function and performance including initial quality and longer term reliability. Their sample size was one. One.
Premise, if it’s a finished product then it is indicative of all since the manufacturer has quality checks and testing in place throughout assembly.
For many many buyers it was gospel for a purchase.
initial resentment from manufacturers was rampant. A decade or so later it was a goal and honor to be on those lists.
In the end, cars got better. Manufacturers learned that they really weren’t spot on in want consumers wanted. The features yes but only if they worked, as reliable function was highly regarded.
Ha not sure we can say that about some of our trucks today though!
Ok still on page 25.
A little different they didn't take a used car and run it Into a wall and then test for reliability
Great comment right here. Well said Sir, “if it’s a finished product then it is indicative of all since the manufacturer has quality checks and testing in place throughout assembly.”Catching up here.
Just something noteworthy - JD powers and consumer reports evaluated, tested cars/trucks for a variety of function and performance including initial quality and longer term reliability. Their sample size was one. One.
Premise, if it’s a finished product then it is indicative of all since the manufacturer has quality checks and testing in place throughout assembly.
For many many buyers it was gospel for a purchase.
initial resentment from manufacturers was rampant. A decade or so later it was a goal and honor to be on those lists.
In the end, cars got better. Manufacturers learned that they really weren’t spot on in want consumers wanted. The features yes but only if they worked, as reliable function was highly regarded.
Ha not sure we can say that about some of our trucks today though!
Ok still on page 25.
I think this is an awesome post. People like to compare vehicle failure rates to scopes but a vehicle has orders of magnitude more parts.Catching up here.
Just something noteworthy - JD powers and consumer reports evaluated, tested cars/trucks for a variety of function and performance including initial quality and longer term reliability. Their sample size was one. One.
Premise, if it’s a finished product then it is indicative of all since the manufacturer has quality checks and testing in place throughout assembly.
For many many buyers it was gospel for a purchase.
initial resentment from manufacturers was rampant. A decade or so later it was a goal and honor to be on those lists.
In the end, cars got better. Manufacturers learned that they really weren’t spot on in want consumers wanted. The features yes but only if they worked, as reliable function was highly regarded.
Ha not sure we can say that about some of our trucks today though!
Ok still on page 25.
I look at the scopes that failed most dramatically and they have super short, sleek turrets. This is the opposite of the big ugly trash cans on swfa, or the towers on NF and Trijicon. Maybe some companies just decided they could make more money with a sleek looking, nicely featured scope than with something that maybe looks less like what their customers were used to and might put buyers off. Is there any chance it's that simple?
40oz scopes? Which models?The scopes mentioned are considerably heavier than Leupold VX5/6HD or Zeiss Conquest V4 HD. Hunters might not want a 2.5-3lb scope on top of their lightweight sporter.
For sure. I didn't mean to say turret height is the only factor. Just a readily apparent and potentially significant design difference.The scopes mentioned are considerably heavier than Leupold VX5/6HD or Zeiss Conquest V4 HD. Hunters might not want a 2.5-3lb scope on top of their lightweight sporter.
40oz scopes? Which models?
They only way consumer report could do a similiar test would be to take a 2 or 3 year old toyota from a unknown location take it through the Baja 500 then start the reliability test I am willing to bet there results would differ?No, but consumers reports did log thousands of miles from 6 months to a year of use To determine reliability. I suppose they could have built a special track of curbs, hills and pot hole abuse to condense that tho.
In my mind the drop tests attempts to replicate use over time. Same end prediction goal. Agree or not I’m not arguing - I’m in the stands in this one
If the test was intended to be destructive, wouldn't they all fail?You don't take a product and destructive test it then start testing normal use testing.
when something doesn't work what was it? was it the fact that something was used not as designed or the fact that it failed just from normal use the way these drop test are set up you would never know
The test is literally set up to try and make them fail yes some are more durable. But that doesn't mean they won't work for some users.If the test was intended to be destructive, wouldn't they all fail?
The scopes tested are not always used. If limited to new in box scopes, how would that work from a practical (and funding) standpoint?They only way consumer report could do a similiar test would be to take a 2 or 3 year old toyota from a unknown location take it through the Baja 500 then start the reliability test I am willing to bet there results would
Because they want an easy button. Someone said its good based on a single tested scope so it must be good...right.Same can be said for the ones who think the drop test is the end all be all.
I think he has a good point though why would you buy the drop tested scopes and not verify you mounted it correctly and there is no shift in the system. Since that was the reason for buying the scope they purchased.
I would bet that 90 percent of the guys that do buy a drop tested scope just mount it sight it in and off they go and the other 10 percent try to drop test and don't get the same results
Just to be sure I'm understanding your point of view, you are asserting that scopes pass or fail based on random chance, not design/build differences?Because they want an easy button. Someone said its good based on a single tested scope so it must be good...right.
A single test of one example really means nothing.