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I live in the North so I honestly don't even remember what sun looks like at this time of year but I remember having tested my Cronus on some bright day and it was quite bright. Maybe even LPVO bright.Do any full size scopes have daylight bright illumination that's the equivalent to a red dot or LPVO? Because I haven't seen it.
With FFP the reticle can be used much better in the low mag levels with the help of an illuminated reticle. Not for super precise shots but when you need the wide fov and shot placement is not surgical.No it’s not daylight bright because that’s retarded. It’s a precision scope, not a 1-4 that’s supposed to function like a red dot down low. Some of their low power hunting scopes have bright illumination but the PMII’s have illumination that’s usable in low light where it’s needed.
With FFP the reticle can be used much better in the low mag levels with the help of an illuminated reticle. Not for super precise shots but when you need the wide fov and shot placement is not surgical.
Maybe an unwanted animal running on the field etc. I would drop the magnification and up the illumination.
But I am going to drop it; it is too far into offtopic, the question was about S&B illuminating in the first place.
The idea is that it just becomes a big + sign and when it is bright you keep it more easily in vision with the both eyes open (as always).Uhhhh, what? Tell me how a light reflecting back and washing your vision makes a FFP reticle more usable at low magnification during normal daylight hours. Low light, absolutely, but daylight that is stupid. A bold black reticle is as visible as it gets. FFP gets small because you’re zooming out of the target and reticle at the same time. Illuminating the reticle doesn’t make the little hash marks any more visible unless it is a thick illumination mask and is bleeding everywhere which is also stupid.
I have an S&B PMII 3-20×50US.
Not really daytime bright zoomed in in bright sunlight. But on lower magnification, in dimmer light or heavy background, it is visible.
^This. /end_thread
Not really. There is more to this, and it’s reticle dependent.
I believe that scopes with the LRR-MIL reticle are the only models that currently have daytime illumination in the current model lineup. Sort of a requirement though if using this reticle in vegetation or any dark background. Glaring sunlight, setting #9 out of #11 is way plenty.
This is a "new thing" for S&B illumination. Whether or not they will make this available in other reticles is unknown.
I almost thought that was a Vortex ring with a built in bubble level until I realized it was just the angle the pic was taken. Outside of the illumination tumors, I've always liked the looks of S&B scopes.
This is like saying "The Mercedes AMG GT's headlights are not bright enough during the day, so I am going to buy the Ford Focus with HIDs instead."Thanks for all the information. I never handled a S&B just read about how great they are. With your input and more searching on the internet . I do not believe the S& B is what I need. I will wait for the Meopta R2 that has great illumination & a dot, will have side PA down to 10 yards . I just heard they was going to be available in June.
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No, it is like saying " I am going to buy a scope that will work for my eyes & application, not one that won't work for my eyes" , I would rather pay 5 grand for a scope I can use & like, then have one given to me that I can't. Funny , daylight illumination was not something I ever wanted or needed, until I had SJS in one eye, cataracts & vitreous separation.This is like saying "The Mercedes AMG GT's headlights are not bright enough during the day, so I am going to buy the Ford Focus with HIDs instead."