Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I picked March as my 1st top tier scope for a number of reasons, which is by no means a slap at the other outfits, indeed there are other scopes out there that others rate w/better IQ.
Top Tier March scopes have Super ED glass. Zero compromises have ED Glass. What's better ?
what is more important? to have best glass, and your scope can't hold zero, or have average glass and you have perfect mechanic.
if you are stupid and you dont know that riflescope is primarly a mechanical device, you are lost in space.
just like alex wheeler's test show, how march and nightforce f-class scopes sucked at holding zero, just like you should be worried primarily about mechanical component of the scope and the next thing is optical performance. and not vice versa.
Couldn't we all be so lucky... You're not missing anything. I used to get into arguments with him and that Cortina dude over on LRH all the time. Everyone would kiss their asses like they were rockstars, and then would defend them tooth and nail, and acted like they were the shining pinnacle of shooting, if you disagreed with what they said to do, or how they do things. It's cult-like...I have not idea who Alex Wheeler is
ILya
This post above is funny…Aren’t some of Alex Wheeler’s builds, World Record Holders?Couldn't we all be so lucky... You're not missing anything. I used to get into arguments with him and that Cortina dude over on LRH all the time. Everyone would kiss their asses like they were rockstars, and then would defend them tooth and nail, and acted like they were the shining pinnacle of shooting, if you disagreed with what they said to do, or how they do things. It's cult-like...
Yeah, it's right next to the strap-on your wife uses to peg you every night.This is funny…
And now your on SH, as the Unofficial President of the Arken Optics fan club… do we get a decoder ring and autographed photo if we join?
Really..that’s your come back?Yeah, it's right next to the strap-on your wife uses to peg you every night.
agree. if you are retarded, life is very simple...Couldn't we all be so lucky... You're not missing anything.
nice.I thought I would drop this off here for information purposes.
I realize it's an SFP scope and it's F-class, but it's germane to this thread.
That is completely incorrect in this case. While there certainly are sponsored shooters (and they wear shirts that list their various sponsors,) and some of them actually do well, Tim is not sponsored by anyone but himself. I believe that is true of the first 3 or 4 (or more) places in F-Open this year. Tim's insistence in not wanting to be sponsored is because he wants to be able to use what he considers to be the very best equipment, so he buys it himself. He has at least 2 March-X 10-60X56 HM scopes, which he acquired as he divested himself of other brands.nice.
but we must have in mind, that they shoot with SPONSOR equipement.
rest of us dont.
I stopped reading after that first statement. You just called my friend Tim a liar.first
i am sure that Tim wasnt winning because of this super scope.
(snip)
He directly attributes the high X count and resulting win to the March-X 8-80×56 High Master Wide Angle Scope. Tim has been quoted as saying “this new scope is worth 1-2 points or Xs during tough optical conditions like those often encountered during the second and especially the third match on a given day. This scope mitigates crossfire risk with its large field of view, and at the same time allows for quicker shots due to the forgiving eyebox that doesn’t tunnel and mitigates vignetting of the viewed image. Over an aggregate of a multi-day tournament, this scope is a competitive advantage and should be considered a great innovation that will offer shooters an immediate improvement in scores.”
I stopped reading after that first statement. You just called my friend Tim a liar.
His statement in the article is:
if he call me a liar, than he is.Denys is no liar.
Kinda like when your Bro Denny twisted MarkyMark007's words to accuse him of calling his boy Tim a liar?A"STRAW MAN" is when U put "words into somebodies' mouth" which sound ridiculous, so U can dismiss something no one EXCEPT YOU has suggested in the 1st place.
Also known as misstating another's position by twisting it into your ridiculous version of what they never said in the 1st place.
THAT is what I'm thinking about.
I'm making use of the ignore feature at this site."Kinda like when your Bro Denny twisted MarkyMark007's words to accuse him of calling his boy Tim a liar?
Man oh man there's some serious ego up in here".......
MarkyMarkOO7 and Denys "buttin heads" has been going on for a long time, that ain't got nothing to do w/MarkyMark007 reading my mind because he can't.
I brought up Marky Mark007 putting words in my mouth and you're right,, I got/get a SERIOUS EGO when that happens.
Guilty as charged and proud of it.
As to whatever has been going on w/MarkyMark007 and Denys, Denys has DISENGAGED, and lets see if MarkyMark007 does the same thing. Without saying whose right, both men have called each other a liar, there's nothing else/left for them to discuss.
From out of your own mouth, these were tests "so good" they got deleted from another venue.
That elevation turret doesn't lock, correct?The discussion by Denys is impressive.
A lot of folks below this level, claim they have this or that "widget" in their optics, which may or may not be true, and regardless of whether they have the skill sets to use that technology to its best advantage.
March reminds me of Contax-Yashica by Kyocera which were very innovative folks whose cameras were designed by the Porche Design Group, using Carl Zeiss lenses made under license in Japan. My Contax AX was/is one of the most innovative cameras ever produced. The Carl Zeiss lenses made under license were every bit as lushly damped, and equaled the performance of their German versions, although some folks always claimed they could tell the difference bet. the lenses.
Folks who have OCD (real bad), and too much time on their hands, who are nuts enough to love working out problems in math/trig usually get into this, but luckily that's who you have running these top tier outfits.
Before I got the High Master 4.5-28X52 from March, I'd read everything I could about them, and reading the discussion about their head optical designer impressed me a great deal.
![]()
Meet the March Scope’s Top Lens Designer – Nishikubo | MARCH Scopes | DEON Optical Design CorporationMARCH Scopes | DEON Optical Design Corporation
MARCH Scopes Official Sitemarchscopes.com
Particularly impressive was the mention of this obscure line, and what he's discussing in this quote.
.........."40 years ago, we handwrote the aberration diagram and designed lenses by calculating every single ray of light using a pocket calculator. Our job was to use the calculator throughout the day. But now thanks to the computer it instantly calculates hundreds of rays of light and we can even print out an aberration diagram."..........
The classical term for what he was doing is "ray tracing", where he was using a pocket calculator, to trace the path of a single ray of light, which gets pretty involved (computers now do this work),so his skill sets and those of March involve not only innovation in the newest types of glass but their incorporation into formulas that produce brilliant IQ.
This link includes some of the optical "mumbo jumbo" involved in this, and I'm not suggesting anybody read it, it's enough for folks unfamiliar w/the subject matter to briefly/quickly scroll down to get an impression of how much detail is involved that these folks master in producing the best. That's the point, a lot of folks can do this, the folks behind these top tier scopes are the best at it.
Image Formation by Lenses | Physics (lumenlearning.com)
Now having said that, If what you see becomes interesting, by all means keep reading.
I picked March as my 1st top tier scope for a number of reasons, which is by no means a slap at the other outfits, indeed there are other scopes out there that others rate w/better IQ.
The bottom line is that March reminded me a lot of my Contax gear, and I just thought it fitting to give them a shot.
The payoff was when I brought the scope home and opened the box and started handling this "jewel". Looking through this thing is dynamite.
I did this shot of the scope a few days after I got it.
![]()
Works only if you lap the rings first.imho coating. there are different coatings on the lences.
if I am correct, withouth coarings you will get worse picture.
Technically incorrect, but practically, you nailed it. Depends on the technology, but yes, companies have been saying things like "HD" glass for years which means absolutely nothing except to the person they marketed it to.Companies can call their glass the “most super duper ED UHD shiznit” if they’re so inclined. There’s no standard other than it being some variant of “low dispersion” glass. This is a simplified answer.
Absolutely, agree with you 100%. Multi-coatings have helped improve image quality substantially by aiding in light transmission, reduced flaring and color fidelity/contrast. I have to wonder if it's a contrast effect, the viewer is able to discern the target a bit better through the mirage vs. a scope with sub-par multi-coating or lens quality. Chromatic aberration reduction through the use of special glass elements also "sharpens" the picture edge to edge but wouldn't eliminate mirage.imho coating. there are different coatings on the lences.
if I am correct, withouth coatings you will get worse picture.
Nailed it!Genuine question here...I'm really at a loss to explain how any scope can lessen mirage since that is an optical effect happening outside of the physical properties of the optical system in a scope. I use a lot of really high end camera gear in a wide variety of climates. Some of the lenses are north of $12K yet given the right atmospheric conditions, are hindered by mirage. They all feature fluorite, ED, Super ED, aspheric elements, etc....It's exacerbated by focal length but there's no getting around it. An 800mm lens on a hot summer day is going to magnify the mirage effect more than a 200mm lens. No amount of optical optimization, outside of viewing in wavelengths beyond human vision, is going to change that.
I could see an optical system that delivers more contrast helping a bit in terms of white wash (flaring) in a mirage situation but it's still going to exhibit mirage effects and optical distortion since the light entering the scope is distorted as it enters its first element. I've not used any super high end scopes hence my genuine interest in how it's possible. To me it's like saying a scope has x-ray vision. Curious if someone can explain what they're seeing in a scope that minimizes mirage. It's a real issue for me personally in hot ass Texas.
Through my years of messing with optics (not all were mine, but I’ve spent lots of time glassing through them), including some true alpha tier scopes (Kahles, Zeiss, Swaro, NF, S&B, Kowa, USO, March, and even a few Hensoldts thrown in the mix), you are 100% correct that mirage still happens, because it is an external factor. Like you say, certain higher quality coatings help with CA reduction to sharpen the image, but it will never eliminate mirage, being it happens outside of the scope. Thats why when folks talk about “Scope-X” will eliminate mirage, I typically stop listening to them seriously.Absolutely, agree with you 100%. Multi-coatings have helped improve image quality substantially by aiding in light transmission, reduced flaring and color fidelity/contrast. I have to wonder if it's a contrast effect, the viewer is able to discern the target a bit better through the mirage vs. a scope with sub-par multi-coating or lens quality. Chromatic aberration reduction through the use of special glass elements also "sharpens" the picture edge to edge but wouldn't eliminate mirage.
Good question. DEON has posted this at their site:Genuine question here...I'm really at a loss to explain how any scope can lessen mirage since that is an optical effect happening outside of the physical properties of the optical system in a scope. I use a lot of really high end camera gear in a wide variety of climates. Some of the lenses are north of $12K yet given the right atmospheric conditions, are hindered by mirage. They all feature fluorite, ED, Super ED, aspheric elements, etc....It's exacerbated by focal length but there's no getting around it. An 800mm lens on a hot summer day is going to magnify the mirage effect more than a 200mm lens. No amount of optical optimization, outside of viewing in wavelengths beyond human vision, is going to change that.
I could see an optical system that delivers more contrast helping a bit in terms of white wash (flaring) in a mirage situation but it's still going to exhibit mirage effects and optical distortion since the light entering the scope is distorted as it enters its first element. I've not used any super high end scopes hence my genuine interest in how it's possible. To me it's like saying a scope has x-ray vision. Curious if someone can explain what they're seeing in a scope that minimizes mirage. It's a real issue for me personally in hot ass Texas.
DEON worked a little more magic in the new March-X 8-80X56 HM WA and when I looked through it, side by side with my 10-60X56 HM at the same magnification, I realized the IQ in the new riflescope was not degrading as fast in the mirage as in my existing scope. Tim proved that my observations were not unfounded when he used the new scope at 75X to 80X for the entire Long-Range championship and won the match. He explains it quite well in the article to which I linked several days ago.