Would you buy this scope?

If all three make it to 3000 rds without issue, is that the "head to production" benchmark?

Not 100% decided yet. They are going to get a lot of use very quickly, and we’ll know if there’s an issue. With what is inside these things, I highly doubt that there will be. They are not $1,000 scopes inside. They have what according to LOW is the most durable erector system and components they can make in a scope like this.
 
@Formidilosus If you had a theoretical scope with 9/10 optical clarity and a 1-100x zoom range, exactly the same clarity / distortion at every power from 1-100x, what power would you set the scope at to shoot groups at 100 yards?

(fully understanding that this is a dumb question, and it really doesn't matter)
 
Not 100% decided yet. They are going to get a lot of use very quickly, and we’ll know if there’s an issue. With what is inside these things, I highly doubt that there will be. They are not $1,000 scopes inside. They have what according to LOW is the most durable erector system and components they can make in a scope like this.
What are the internal differences between what LOW offers on this scope vs what NF offers related to durability (believe you said earlier NF isn't made by LOW but I may have misread).
 
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@Formidilosus If you had a theoretical scope with 9/10 optical clarity and a 1-100x zoom range, exactly the same clarity / distortion at every power from 1-100x, what power would you set the scope at to shoot groups at 100 yards?

(fully understanding that this is a dumb question, and it really doesn't matter)

Doesn’t really matter. 10-20x probably.
 
What are the internal differences between what LOW offers on this scope vs what NF offers related to durability (believe you said earlier NF isn't made by LOW but I may have misread).

LOW does make NF scopes- some at least. I’m not positive of all of it, and what I am I cannot say.
 
Not 100% decided yet. They are going to get a lot of use very quickly, and we’ll know if there’s an issue. With what is inside these things, I highly doubt that there will be. They are not $1,000 scopes inside. They have what according to LOW is the most durable erector system and components they can make in a scope like this.
This is the part that makes me curious. Is the robustness from the springs that hold the erector tube against the turrets? That is weak point of most scopes that lose zero, correct? The springs cannot hold the erector tube against the turret firmly when dropped or driving down bumpy roads?
 
Scope #1 taken offf the tikka and put on the BAT. So same rifle, rings and ammo from the last two. Same surface for the drops.


Bore sight and two rounds high. Adjusted and next 8 in the left dot.
IMG_3254.jpeg


Drop Eval:

15x drops from 36”. Same surface and pad as the last two. No point of impact shift whatsoever.

IMG_3258.jpeg





That is all 3 today, and the scopes did exactly what the manufacturer said they would. Now they get mounted on rifles and start the shooing.
 
I don’t see that much differentiation between a 3-18 and a 2-12. A 2-8, especially with a 36 or 38 obj starts to be a different scope. From a sales standpoint I’d want to offer two different capabilities.
 
I don’t see that much differentiation between a 3-18 and a 2-12. A 2-8, especially with a 36 or 38 obj starts to be a different scope. From a sales standpoint I’d want to offer two different capabilities.

Well, a 20 oz 3-12 was what some of us were hoping for. I understand why that didn’t work out, but I can still wish.

Scope specs:

FFP 3-12x40 to 3-12x44mm

Consistently holds zero through 3-foot drops and 3,000 rounds of constant use.

The reticle is specially designed for 25 to 600 yards, with bold outer posts and correct center aiming references.

Zero Stop

Low profile top turret.

Capped windage.

Large eye box

Good glass

20oz


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
 
The difference for me would be tube size and weight. If it’s going to be 20 or more ounces and a 30mm tube, just make it a 2-12x42.
 
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