Would you buy this scope?

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


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Depends on how much $
 
Have you spent time behind the THLR reticle? What about it don’t you like?


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Much like the "donut" reticles Nightforce offers, you don't necessarily need to spend time behind them, to tell yourself, it's not what you are looking for. Why try and talk yourself into something you know you aren't interested in?

Why do some of you get so hung up on a guy not liking the THLR reticle? BFD! More scopes available for you.
 
Much like the "donut" reticles Nightforce offers, you don't necessarily need to spend time behind them, to tell yourself, it's not what you are looking for. Why try and talk yourself into something you know you aren't interested in?

Why do some of you get so hung up on a guy not liking the THLR reticle? BFD! More scopes available for you.
Sometimes it isn't that people are "hung up on someone not liking the thing" but rather trying to see why they don't like it to see if there is something they have overlooked in their observation of the thing. Other times, people just like to be confrontational. Short form written communication doesn't always give the best view of nuances in speech.

Jay
 
Much like the "donut" reticles Nightforce offers, you don't necessarily need to spend time behind them, to tell yourself, it's not what you are looking for. Why try and talk yourself into something you know you aren't interested in?

Why do some of you get so hung up on a guy not liking the THLR reticle? BFD! More scopes available for you.

I agree to an extent. But I also look at it like my daughter refusing to try mashed potatoes. I won’t make her eat them, because they are just another delicious pile of carbs, but she absolutely won’t even try them, or explain to me why she won’t try them, and that frustrates me.

I am also a bit curious about what reticle that guy would like. I’m willing to try the THLR and trust that I will probably like it, but I would be interested in the scope even if it only had the mil-c style.
 
Sometimes it isn't that people are "hung up on someone not liking the thing" but rather trying to see why they don't like it to see if there is something they have overlooked in their observation of the thing. Other times, people just like to be confrontational. Short form written communication doesn't always give the best view of nuances in speech.

Jay

This right here

Not trying to be confrontational. The original comment about disliking the THLR reticle was rather absolute. I was genuinely wondering if that guy had a reason (based on experience) to feel that way, or was judging simply based on how it looks. I believe he said something like “it’s far from the best” reticle offering.

I understand trepidation with the THLR reticle. When I first saw it, I wasn’t convinced. Seemed busy with lots of gimmicks at first glance. Then I started seeing guys that I know have LOTS of experience speaking highly of it. More than one. Found the review of the Minox ZP-5 explaining some of its features. It started to make sense for real world use, at least on paper. I have been very leery of FFP reticles for hunting purposes, having had multiple real life, real world bad experiences with them in low light/low power situations.

Long story short, I found someone locally who has a ZP-5. Got behind it for a range day, and was very impressed with the THLR. Can echo what many others have said. You see what you need to see when using it. Everything in the design is there for a reason, and functions the way it should. Works beautifully on low power for fast/low light, and on high power for longer range work. The S2H stripped back version should be even better, as it retained every useful feature and deleted the extras IMO. I had to see it to believe it. It’s not a reticle that before this experience would have jumped off the page as being “good” for hunting to me. I’m not “hung up on it” I just think many other guys will be in the same boat as me, which is why I was trying to tease this out of the conversation. I don’t want guys to write this scope off as “not for them” based on how this reticle looks on paper alone.

That being said, I would genuinely like to hear if someone has spent time behind a THLR and found it to be sub-par in some way. And what other reticle would be their choice instead. (Excluding the Mrad/MOA discussion dumper fire).

@HuntHarder @N2TRKYS



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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
I prefer at minimum an 18x on the higher end, but everything else looks great.
 
@Jake Larsen I have never used the THLR. I am going to try one of these scopes out, but if I am being honest, the reticle isn't my top reason. I don't shoot mils but I am willing to try one. Durable, reliable, good glass and not overly heavy are priority over the THLR for me. I know I am in the minority on this site, but I have killed just fine without it. I like the idea of an illuminated center dot only. I like the look at low power but honestly, rarely would shoot at that power.

Unlike a lot on here, the reticle has rarely, maybe never, been the issue between me killing and not killing. I used a green, illuminated moar this year at absolute first light and it was beautiful @ 260 yards.

At the end of the day, this is just another reliable scope with a reticle that some guys on here love. Maybe I will to after using it, 🤷🏻‍♂️. If guys don't wanna try it out because it's mil or they dont think they need the reticle, or it's too expensive, it just means more scopes for the guys that want to. In 6-8 months, hopefully we can test these things out and see if they are, what lots on here think they will be.
 
I've only shot MOA, but I'm definitely intrigued by this and will try out the THLR reticle. It looks very clean, makes sense, draws the eye in and the scope appears to be very durable. Time will tell, but the initial reports sound awesome and very impressive for the $1k mark.
 
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