Would you buy this scope?

I don't understand how that exceeds the "involvement" or "unbiased" thresholds of qualifying as 3rd party testing?
I had originally typed up a long response to the person you’re asking questions to. However, I went back and deleted it because he doesn’t seem to engage with any true openness to have his mind changed, and I didn’t wanna clog the thread.

But to touch on this point above: third parties are very frequently biased. That’s why no definition of the phrase includes bias.

Is it better to use 3rd parties with limited real or perceived bias? Yes.

But it’s by no means a requirement for the term, and ZT is completely honest when they call Form a 3rd party.
 
Can you elaborate on his involvement? From my understanding, the extent of it has been (paraphrasing in my own words) "here is a list of scopes that have proven to be reliable, here are the features that would be beneficial on a reliable scope. If you build it, I will beat the shit out of it and report back with my results, good or bad". S2H coordinated the collaboration, and the scopes were actually put through more rigorous testing than the baseline standard eval that is well known, which was risky in itself if they failed.

I don't understand how that exceeds the "involvement" or "unbiased" thresholds of qualifying as 3rd party testing?

I can tell you what happens in industries that I have been directly involved with, for context on 3rd party work. Then I'll answer the question about bias and involvement.

First, the only thing that I am criticizing is ZT's used of "3rd party" on their website. If they posted something like, "a consultant verified design function" or "the scope has been validated by the team at S2H", then I wouldn't have mentioned anything.

It's totally fine that someone involved with the project did the eval. Just say that. Don't make it sound like some unaffiliated entity did it. Some may take what I wrote as an attack. I see it as a helpful suggestion, so peers and consumers take ZT and S2H more seriously.

Peers and astute consumers look at claims carefully, and it makes ZT and S2H look unprofessional or sloppy, if they didn't actually use a 3rd party. When you say "3rd party" it actually means something and you need to be careful using it with certain audiences. Especially by those who may have government contracts, or do work in a regulated field. It makes people suspicious of motives.

In product development, you have to determine and control your resources. Those are either internal or external resources. A 3rd party performing inspections, is never an internal resource. They don't get involved with any of the product development inputs like spec requirements, characteristics, or performance. They only test/inspect to the criteria provided by the client or statutory/regulatory bodies. Otherwise there could be a conflict of interest.

That stated, an internal group can be involved with design inputs and perform internal inspections/testing. A customer may or may not accept those internal activities. They may perform their own, such as a Functional Acceptance Test (FAT) or Pre-Acceptance Test. That would be 2nd Party. Or may specify certain 3rd Party inspection/testing.

When product is mission critical or life/limb are in danger, there will often be certified inspectors involved. For aerospace/defense, they are called Source Inspectors and are tracked in a database. They have no affiliation with the company that they are doing the inspections for. Would you want national defense products or dangerous goods to be inspected by a competent and independent person, or just leave it up to the manufacturer and their buddy? I had to prepare material for Source Inspectors and babysit them while they went over everything with a fine tooth comb. All of the testing had to be outsourced, but I could have done it myself, which included impact testing. We were allowed to make the product, not test it. The end customer (USGOV) required independent 3rd party testing, not internal testing.

Another example, there are regulations for pressure vessels and those are typically checked by an inspector working for an insurance company. They are not internal employees. Wouldn't you want the company making a pressure vessel to perform all their internal checks, then have someone completely outside the development path to check to make sure all their ducks are in a row so that product doesn't escape, rupture, and kill someone? You can probably see the value in having a "fresh set of eyes" look at something, right? Sometimes people get too close to a product or project, and overlook something that an outside person picks up.

Also recall that Boeing was suspended from performing "self certification". Internal teams were issuing certificates, but there was a serious cultural and systemic breakdown in the organization which led to fatal crashes. They were not independent or free of bias, and had a vested interest in certain outcomes like meeting project deadlines.

I'm not saying a consumer rifle scope is the same as weapons or pressure vessels, but I think you get my point. A 3rd party is not someone involved with the product dev.

As presented in this thread, Formi and Ryan wanted a 3-12x scope and Formi said that this particular OTS (Off The Shelf) model that LOW dusted off, exceeded their expectations. He said a ground up design would be something like 2 years. That doesn't sound like an independent 3rd party, it sounds like someone part of the project even if no money is exchanged. He has an interest in the scope that he helped spec, right?

Also, would this scope have a THLR reticle, if it weren't for Formi? I doubt it, but could be wrong.

Again, not saying that Formi would skew the results. And it seems like he's the best and only option that they have for the evals. But he's obviously part of the internal team. He's fielded product questions and provided info from LOW. He was involved with the scope configuration and reticle. The scope is being sold by Shoot2Hunt. He is a shooting coach for Shoot2Hunt, right?

It sounds like others besides Formi have evaluated the scope design. In some fields, we'd call it a Jury Evaluation. Trusted people are given samples to try, and a coordinator compiles and reports the results. It's not 3rd party, but still OK and can be an important part of product dev. That's better marketing material in my view, than making 3rd party claims.

Hope that helps, Harvey. And sorry to ramble. If you have more questions, shoot me a PM. That way we don't clutter this thread.
 
I can tell you what happens in industries that I have been directly involved with, for context on 3rd party work. Then I'll answer the question about bias and involvement.

First, the only thing that I am criticizing is ZT's used of "3rd party" on their website. If they posted something like, "a consultant verified design function" or "the scope has been validated by the team at S2H", then I wouldn't have mentioned anything.

It's totally fine that someone involved with the project did the eval. Just say that. Don't make it sound like some unaffiliated entity did it. Some may take what I wrote as an attack. I see it as a helpful suggestion, so peers and consumers take ZT and S2H more seriously.

Peers and astute consumers look at claims carefully, and it makes ZT and S2H look unprofessional or sloppy, if they didn't actually use a 3rd party. When you say "3rd party" it actually means something and you need to be careful using it with certain audiences. Especially by those who may have government contracts, or do work in a regulated field. It makes people suspicious of motives.

In product development, you have to determine and control your resources. Those are either internal or external resources. A 3rd party performing inspections, is never an internal resource. They don't get involved with any of the product development inputs like spec requirements, characteristics, or performance. They only test/inspect to the criteria provided by the client or statutory/regulatory bodies. Otherwise there could be a conflict of interest.

That stated, an internal group can be involved with design inputs and perform internal inspections/testing. A customer may or may not accept those internal activities. They may perform their own, such as a Functional Acceptance Test (FAT) or Pre-Acceptance Test. That would be 2nd Party. Or may specify certain 3rd Party inspection/testing.

When product is mission critical or life/limb are in danger, there will often be certified inspectors involved. For aerospace/defense, they are called Source Inspectors and are tracked in a database. They have no affiliation with the company that they are doing the inspections for. Would you want national defense products or dangerous goods to be inspected by a competent and independent person, or just leave it up to the manufacturer and their buddy? I had to prepare material for Source Inspectors and babysit them while they went over everything with a fine tooth comb. All of the testing had to be outsourced, but I could have done it myself, which included impact testing. We were allowed to make the product, not test it. The end customer (USGOV) required independent 3rd party testing, not internal testing.

Another example, there are regulations for pressure vessels and those are typically checked by an inspector working for an insurance company. They are not internal employees. Wouldn't you want the company making a pressure vessel to perform all their internal checks, then have someone completely outside the development path to check to make sure all their ducks are in a row so that product doesn't escape, rupture, and kill someone? You can probably see the value in having a "fresh set of eyes" look at something, right? Sometimes people get too close to a product or project, and overlook something that an outside person picks up.

Also recall that Boeing was suspended from performing "self certification". Internal teams were issuing certificates, but there was a serious cultural and systemic breakdown in the organization which led to fatal crashes. They were not independent or free of bias, and had a vested interest in certain outcomes like meeting project deadlines.

I'm not saying a consumer rifle scope is the same as weapons or pressure vessels, but I think you get my point. A 3rd party is not someone involved with the product dev.

As presented in this thread, Formi and Ryan wanted a 3-12x scope and Formi said that this particular OTS (Off The Shelf) model that LOW dusted off, exceeded their expectations. He said a ground up design would be something like 2 years. That doesn't sound like an independent 3rd party, it sounds like someone part of the project even if no money is exchanged. He has an interest in the scope that he helped spec, right?

Also, would this scope have a THLR reticle, if it weren't for Formi? I doubt it, but could be wrong.

Again, not saying that Formi would skew the results. And it seems like he's the best and only option that they have for the evals. But he's obviously part of the internal team. He's fielded product questions and provided info from LOW. He was involved with the scope configuration and reticle. The scope is being sold by Shoot2Hunt. He is a shooting coach for Shoot2Hunt, right?

It sounds like others besides Formi have evaluated the scope design. In some fields, we'd call it a Jury Evaluation. Trusted people are given samples to try, and a coordinator compiles and reports the results. It's not 3rd party, but still OK and can be an important part of product dev. That's better marketing material in my view, than making 3rd party claims.

Hope that helps, Harvey. And sorry to ramble. If you have more questions, shoot me a PM. That way we don't clutter this thread.
Nice job laying that out and informing folks on here how it works in the “real world.” I’m sure the scope is great and I believe it was evaluated honestly, and I might buy one myself at some point. But, you are correct in everything you stated.
 
Not everyone is hunting just open ground or mountains. I am in SW MO, hunting for me is oak thickets, ravines, and hayfields. The vast majority of deer I have killed have been shot at 20 yards and less, and we are not talking small numbers. At the same time, 5 or 600 yards across a hayfield does happen, too. A good low to 12x is not a negative. I use an SWFA 3-9x42 because I already have it. Something better comes along, I could be persuaded to upgrade.
 
If any company were to pay a third party to analyze their product, then they really aren’t a third party….
 
The honest answer is I would recommend this scope for most use cases. None of the 3-9's or 3-12's we offer at this time high end scopes. Our Thrive HD offers excellent glass, they are out of china but I have always been impressed. The 4-16 Thrive HD may be a good one to check out

Thanks. What't the best scope ZT sells for lowlight? For brightness. And usable reticle?

And how does that scope compare to this S2H scope?
 
I am very excited to see the inevitable comparisons between this and the NX6 3-18, it looks like the NX6 is one ounce heavier, FOV, eye relief, exit pupil etc are all almost identical, capped windage, pushbutton illum, locking diopter are also both shared.

I think my main interest will be glass quality differences between two very similar optics with a $900 price Delta.

Finally, for hunting, the Mil-C is objectively terrible at low mag especially when compared to a THLR but that's kind of a no brainer, hopefully nightforce figures their shit out and triples the line width of the outer bars and brings them in to 5 mils at 3,6,9
 
Also another cool thing to look forward to is the FOV at 3x with the RokScope, 37.1 feet is ****ing MASSIVE. The 3-18 T6xi, NX6, Mk5HD, Tenmile, Meopta, and probably others all have smaller FOVs. The only 3-18 I can find that outclasses the RokScope is a 3-18 SFP S&B that costs $3700
 
So I have read much and have 2 scopes 1 of each reticle on order. I cannot remember but would like to know or reminded, what is the glass of these compared to?
 
So I have read much and have 2 scopes 1 of each reticle on order. I cannot remember but would like to know or reminded, what is the glass of these compared to?
I haven’t seen one so have no idea. I’m pretty sure Form compared it favorably to ATACR glass though, or at least tenmile.

Haha. I would be told I was biased if I said what I actually see with them. I will compare them with a 4-16x ATACR when I can.

I will say all three are better than any Trijicon Tenmile, Credo, or Maven RS1.2 that I have seen. There is no tunneling at all. Eyebox is better than all four of those.

I do not want to overstate it, but it is really good.

Today, setting sun, pretty nasty flare conditions.

View attachment 1011718

Pictures are pretty good representation of what was seen- the NF 4-16x ATACR was maybe 10% better in real life than the pictures show, and is also old. It is one of the first that they made. The S2H is very close to what it was in real life- it might have been 5% worse than the pictures. An obvious and noticeable difference.



Both scopes set at 16x


NF 4-16x ATACR-
View attachment 1011713



S2H-
View attachment 1011714



When not looking at the sun, the images between them were similar- sometimes it seems the NF was better, sometimes the S2H seemed better. But, for whatever reason, the S2H controlled glare noticeably better.
 
I handled one of the prototypes at a show for a while. Comparing head to head with some things I brought. What I can say definitively is that it’s better than a Maven RS1.2 and any Trijicon. I would also say it was worse image clarity than the NF NX8 I had on hand, though the S2H eyebox and reticle were miles better.

So I’m guessing most people will think the overall optical quality lands in the “above maven but below NF” space.

At $999, there’s zero doubt it’s the best value in this space by a serious margin. At present market prices I’d call $1300-1500 a fair price. Maybe more. I think it’s hard to over-emphasize how good of a product this is for serious hunters looking for value.
 
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