I thought about that and initially didnt include any of those lower powered scopes at first because I wasnt sure how I should treat them.
But then I figured that dividing by an 18x scope by 20 scales the FOV values smaller as they would in the real world if you were to continue zooming in, the higher powered scopes scale their FOV up as they are zooming out and seeing more area.
I added the LRTSi and SWFA as budget alternatives and they do comparatively poorly in this metric but they have reputations for good visual quality glass for the price range. I assume that their designs cater towards delivering a more refined, quality, image instead of trying to deliver a larger image.
And I too noticed that the lower powered Kahles and Leupold 3-18s were lagging behind but then I figured that it was just the sacrifice one makes with an ultrashort design. But its notable that the eotech does relatively well in this regard while being the shortest. I added the S&B ultra shorts now and they are in the middle of them.
I added some nifty scale bars too
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I think ideally we would find the rate that FOV is scaling from Minimum power to maximum power (with bias from tunneling complications to consider and so on) and then extrapolate the rate of that change rather than just going by the max power alone but there are so many variables. Its tough to compare.