Thank you for the invite. I used to do single malt Scotch but I'm really just a gin guy.
For the general public, fluorite glass is naturally low dispersion and that has been known for a long time. The problem is that it is difficult to make, especially in larger lenses (making it expensive) and is "fragile" compared to glass. I still believe that Nikon and others came up with ED glass in the 1960s and that allowed Nikon to use more ED glass in their lenses, compared to say, Canon, which used more fluorite glass. In the high $ camera lenses we actually see Nikon and Canon offerings using ED, Super ED and fluorite glass nowadays.
You're absolutely correct and thank you for correcting me, when you pointed out my error with the use of "all else being equal." My point was more about equal levels of quality in assembly, but definitely, "all else being equal" is nonsense here.
Thank you for pointing out the Hensoldt 6-24X72. I knew about that riflescope, because of the 72mm objective, but did not know that it had fluorite glass. EuroOptics shows the MSRP of that scope to be an eye-watering price of$12,000 but they have it on sale for $5,000. I cannot find anything about it at the Zeiss website, they only talk about Victory, Conquest and Terra riflescopes anymore. I downloaded the manual for that scope at EuroOptics. It's dated 2010, almost 8 years ago. A ctrl-f search of the manual for the word fluorite returns nothing. Clicking on their link for support returns nothing, unreachable, somehow it changes it to
www.cassidian.com, which I believe is part of Airbus .. A ctrl-f search of that page does not turn up Zeiss, Hensoldt but optroni does: Jena-Optroniks. The names Jena and Zeiss are linked. The Euro Optics site says Hensoldt is part of Airbus. Over at Airbus, a search reveals that Airbus sold Hensoldt to KKR in March of this year. KKR website finally shows Hensoldt at
www.hensoldt.net. Wow, that was easy, and fun. Circle down to the sights and then you get to the riflescope and the 6-24X72 is there. A ctrl-f search for fluorite brings up nothing,
They offer that scope in 72mm and 56mm. This is the write up they have about it.
The spelling mistakes are theirs. I will also point out that their statements lay waste to a certain gunwriter's assertion that the objective lens size has nothing to do with the amount of light going to the eye. (It's another story.)
So, I cannot confirm your assertion of the use of fluorite glass in a riflescope, and this one is rare and very expensive.
It's also an SFP, in case someone cares.