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Ehh, it's a good scope I believe. However, there is a case to be made for the new Burris XTR III illuminated, that would be my next choice or maybe my first if it would have been out sooner(though I wish it was assembled in Japan like the LHT not Phillipines, but it does still have Japanese glass).Well I was ready to dump some money down on one of these and now I'm not as sure as I was before.
Not from the stupid tests, but from others experiences here.
Yes. Their higher end stuff doesn't have some abysmal failure rate that most would have you believe. It's become trendy to bash vortex at this point. So in that light of that when their products that are produced here or in Japan fail, I am surprised. Now do I think some stuff could be done better with QC? Yeah the Gen III and LHT sample variance are prime examples of that.Are people really surprised that Vortex products fail? Corporate isn’t going to go against their own interest. Of course it passed their test.
Yeah I don't understand this either, I get tolerances and specs from an OEM. However, the Razor line is OEM'D in the same place as most of the other optics people are gonna say are "bomb proof", so it's kinda silly. For the cheap optics, yes I agree, for the more expensive stuff it's gonna be close to the other stuff made in the same place. *These LHTs are very lightweight so I can see them being not as robust as the others in the razor line*Are people really surprised that Vortex products fail? Corporate isn’t going to go against their own interest. Of course it passed their test.
Right, yours may run forever and mine may go down after 6 months. Thats just the way things work sometimes, see it in every genre of products. My perspective is everything made by men can fail, now I want the product least likely to do that, so I buy the best I can afford; however, for everyone who has had a vortex or two go out on them for instance, you'll find another person whose abused them and they still keep trucking. Or probably any other optics company with higher end stuff.I just bought one of the 3-15 LHT models to put on a lighter weight hunting setup. Interested to see how it holds up. My daughter has a 3-15 PST Gen 2 that has served well for the last couple years and I thought this LHT would be a bit of an upgrade. The Razor 4.5-27 on my old match rifle has never missed a beat and has been put through the ringer. So far, Vortex has been good products at each respective price point. The glass is nothing like my S&B scopes, make no mistake.
This scope checked a lot of boxes in regards to how I wanted to set up a hunting rifle for my kids. I'll have to put the new scope through it's paces myself. I've seen enough of this kind of bullshit on the forums over the years to know that I don't need to be too concerned unless I have an issue myself.
Mine was fucked and I was also thinking it was me or the gun.It reads like a CNN article for a forum post which is the very topic of all 4 pages of this thread is a little far fetched. Dude says what vortex told him after he inquired about the incident. He can’t be right, that’s fake news. But another random guy who likes to throw scopes in the snow is taken as gospel. That’s my point.
But regardless i want to see what happens. See if the LHT pans out. Or if it really is a lemon. I own an LHT and do have wondering zeros but my chamber has also been fucked from the get go. So I’m curious.
I’ve had a couple of scopes not track on me. Most notably the mark 6 i had. The chamber on this gun though was sticking 108gr factory eld m. Then this happened when i took the GF out to hunt. Need to put the LHT on the 7ss and run it through it’s paces.Mine was fucked and I was also thinking it was me or the gun.
Wandering zero is a bitch because it makes you question everything, chamber, crown, base, mount, etc.I’ve had a couple of scopes not track on me. Most notably the mark 6 i had. The chamber on this gun though was sticking 108gr factory eld m. Then this happened when i took the GF out to hunt. Need to put the LHT on the 7ss and run it through it’s paces.
At the same time i had an incident where i thought our V6 was faulty and it wasn’t. Turned out to be the setup.
We’ve received your riflescope, and run it through our full inspections and repair process. All optical and mechanical parameters have been verified, and the optic is now in perfect working condition! The riflescope is ready to head back to you, and if you’ve got any questions on the repair process, what we’ve found in diagnostics, or otherwise – simply shoot me an e-mail, or drop me a line. If I do not hear back from you by Monday, February 7th, I will send it back with my card in the box so you can call at anytime.
When an optic comes into Vortex, we completely eliminate all other variables such as the bases, rings, action screws, ammo, muzzle device etc. We focus on just the optic. The optic is ran through a series of tests and everything was verified. I had a chance to double check it as far as impact testing and tracking. It tracks perfect and doesn't deviate from zero at all. The equipment we have allows us to observe a shift as small as 1/4 MOA or .1 MRAD and I couldn't get it to shift at all, as it stands, outside of any rings or mounts.
I did want to discuss the mounting process you're using. Was this optic put through your Drop test or evaluation? I observed loctite/thread locker on the optic. Our torque specs are 15-18 inch-lbs with no loctite, so dry torque. If you use loctite, it's a lubricant and will lead to higher, unknown torque values. This then leads to a number of issues with an optic including trouble zeroing, holding zero, tracking etc. When you use a quality ring or mount, loctite isn't needed as those screws are under load and as long as they are torqued properly should not loosen.
We also observed some wear on the bottom of the scope, on the bell end or objective end housing. This may have been mounted tight to a barrel or rail etc. I wanted to dig into this further as it can certainly impact the consistency of your setup.
I'm happy to take this a step further for you if it helps restore confidence and mount the optic on a known rifle and set of rings, to our torque specs, and shoot some 3 shot groups in our indoor 100 yard range.
Please let me know if you'd like me to do that or if you'd like to discuss anything further on the phone.
Thank you again for choosing Vortex Optics!
All the Best,
More corporate doublespeak as usual...it's a lubricant and will lead to higher, unknown torque values.
See, specifically...For A307A, J429 Grade 5 and 8, FNL Grade 9, EcoGuardTM, A574, A193 B7, Class 4.6, 8.8, 10.9, and 12.9 externally thread fasteners and Prevailing Torque All-Metal Nut chart, the torque values were calculated from the formula Torque=KDF, where
K is the estimated torque coefficient
(for full details contact [email protected]).
K = 0.12 when using EcoGuardTM coated nut, bolt and washer
K = 0.15 for “lubricated” conditions including EcoGuardTM, some oil, tapping fluid, etc. K = 0.17 for some anti-seize, thread lockers, and some plain conditions
K = 0.20 for zinc and dry conditions
K = 0.12 is listed for A193 B7, which would be used for some general PTFE coatings When using zinc plated lubricated with wax prevailing torque lock nuts, the K value can vary between 0.12–0.18. Use Prevailing Torque All-Metal Nut chart if using this style of nut.
Wherethe torque values were calculated from the formula Torque=KDF, where
AndK = 0.15 for “lubricated” conditions including EcoGuardTM, some oil, tapping fluid, etc.
VersusK = 0.17 for some anti-seize, thread lockers, and some plain conditions
ReferenceK = 0.20 for zinc and dry conditions
So you expected Vortex to say the LHT won’t hold zero? They would never admit to anything publicly. That would be a dumb move.So here's an interesting update on the LHT that was tested on Rokslide.
Looks like some mounting issues were noted by the tech at Vortex when the optic was returned for repair..
I can't believe he put loktite on the rings
"scope back from Vortex. Their communication was outstanding. I do have a VM into them to clarify something. But here is the email. We will listen to their mounting specification and retest."
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Maybe you should reread their statement, looks like multiple issues were at play.So you expected Vortex to say the LHT won’t hold zero? They would never admit to anything publicly. That would be a dumb move.
I disagree. It’s more of a risk to cover it up than it is to admit there was a fault with the sample.So you expected Vortex to say the LHT won’t hold zero? They would never admit to anything publicly. That would be a dumb move.
I agree, I don't believe Vortex is going to risk their reputation (even though some on here hate them and others fan boy, I'm not either but I can look at them objectively and say they have some good quality stuff in their high end lines that has held up even in military use, oh and btw just got a military contract) on lying about a scope because of some random guy on rokslide saying his sample set of one had a shifting zero. That just seems illogical and unreasonable. That doesn't mean it can't be true, I grant that, but it does seem that would be the worst move and out of character for Vortex whose known for outstanding customer service.I disagree. It’s more of a risk to cover it up than it is to admit there was a fault with the sample.
Leupold is a prime example of this. Mark 6 was plagued with issues and before long people got the message and stopped buying them. The only saving grace of that optic was Mil contacts. They resigned that bastard of a scope with a 5x erector , C2 knobs, and the mark 5 series has been a huge success.
Other scopes he tests don’t have a problem with thread locker. His f1 proof scope never has a problem.Maybe you should reread their statement, looks like multiple issues were at play.
Bottom line there are many variables that can effect zero shift, some amateurs test is pretty useless without proper controls.
Or we can buy into your conspiracy theory that Vortex is making up a bunch of shit to cover their ass.
Hell NF has done it..
Vortex didn’t exactly say they did or did not fix the scope. The wording in the email is pretty careful.From everything I've read and my own experience with Vortex, they seem to be straight shooters when a scope has a problem, and they fix it. I see no evidence in all this to believe that all of a sudden they are trying to hide the fact that a scope had a problem. I'm not sure how any of us can go there based on anything but us just believing it OR wanting to believe it/wanting it to be true. Is there anyone who as ever had a scope issue that Vortex wasn't willing to fix and said- "eh, it's fine" in this thread or otherwise? Genuinely curious and it would give some credence to some of the things being proposed...
Right, maybe I said that wrongly. I wasn't trying to say from my post they did or didn't fix it. My point was that from everything I've seen reported from users and from when I've even reached out(even though it wasn't for a broken scope) they've always taken care of an issue and admitted if something was wrong/needed to be fixed or been willing to have a conversation about a potential issue. That's my experience, but others may differ, I'm open to hearing that for sure.Vortex didn’t exactly say they did or did not fix the scope. The wording in the email is pretty careful.
“We’ve received your riflescope, and run it through our full inspections and repair process. All optical and mechanical parameters have been verified, and the optic is now in perfect working condition!”
That's good information, thanks.At least they were honest with me
You won’t get a response to this, except for maybe a “trust the science” bs.
Dudes have too much invested in their “next best thing” scopes to face reality. It’s called denial.
Does anyone really expect an individual, any individual, that is connected to certain manufacturers to shit where they eat?
On the "shit where you eat" front, Avery/Rokslide is doing exactly that by showing what it takes to make a bunch of his sponsors' products fail in the name of the community and getting better info out there. That's what floors me about the criticism-dude is stepping out there away from his personal interests and people want to talk shit about it.
I put a lot of weight on what @koshkin says but I haven't seen how he suggests a consumer is supposed to know which scopes are less likely to lose zero, only references to manufacturers testing such things and that he could make them all fail. That's not helpful in the slightest to people who want to make educated equipment decisions for hunts they invest huge amounts of time, money, and passion into.
So you think some guy on the internet should conduct his own scope testing process without any standardized method or control, while also leaving out a lot of fine details, and we don't have a legitimate right to question said results?On the "shit where you eat" front, Avery/Rokslide is doing exactly that by showing what it takes to make a bunch of his sponsors' products fail in the name of the community and getting better info out there. That's what floors me about the criticism-dude is stepping out there away from his personal interests and people want to talk shit about it.
I put a lot of weight on what @koshkin says but I haven't seen how he suggests a consumer is supposed to know which scopes are less likely to lose zero, only references to manufacturers testing such things and that he could make them all fail. That's not helpful in the slightest to people who want to make educated equipment decisions for hunts they invest huge amounts of time, money, and passion into.
So you think some guy on the internet should conduct his own scope testing process without any standardized method or control, while also leaving out a lot of fine details, and we don't have a legitimate right to question said results?
Boy that reminds me of a certain "Trust the Science" theme that's been going around...
I don't own this scope and I don't plan on owning one anytime soon, I'm not cheerleading for Vortex or any other company.
I do however take interest in good repeatable data, and I haven't seen it yet.
Is telling people to test their own shit, and laying out the guidelines for doing so telling them to “trust the science?” Who form is doesn’t matter in the slightest if other people are testing their gear and seeing what works on their own.So you think some guy on the internet should conduct his own scope testing process without any standardized method or control, while also leaving out a lot of fine details, and we don't have a legitimate right to question said results?
Boy that reminds me of a certain "Trust the Science" theme that's been going around...
I don't own this scope and I don't plan on owning one anytime soon, I'm not cheerleading for Vortex or any other company.
I do however take interest in good repeatable data, and I haven't seen it yet.
The failure rate of the first Gen PST was wild yet initially it was a very well received scope on the hide. Yet Vortex never admitted it, they just quietly replaced them until they discontinued and then moved on to Gen 2. I bet you you’ll have a really hard time to find someone that is still on their first Gen 1 PST and uses his rifle for anything else but a safe queen.Its 2022, a sizeable portion of a companies marketing budget goes towards social media. That includes disinformation and attacks against competitiors, which today, are more effective per dollar spent than shiny photo ops. This is why people are skeptical and if the last 4 years hasn't made you question everything you hear, then you are a lost soul.
No one knows what the real failure rate was except vortex and you need to put things in perspective. At the time, there was NOTHING comparable for even twice the price of the gen 1 PST. You have to look at things in the context of the time and market. It was still better than a MK4 and the NXS was the only other thing better at 3 times the price.The failure rate of the first Gen PST was wild yet initially it was a very well received scope on the hide. Yet Vortex never admitted it, they just quietly replaced them until they discontinued and then moved on to Gen 2. I bet you you’ll have a really hard time to find someone that is still on their first Gen 1 PST and uses his rifle for anything else but a safe queen.
Some scope designs are worst than others. The LHT HD seems to be more delicate than others. Not sure why anyone is so shocked and so willing to tear their shirt off to defend Vortex. They made decent optics, they also make garbage. Just like trijicon, Burris, Bushnell and others.
0.50$ have been deposited in your account shill. Plenty of scopes in early 2010s were suitable such as the Bushnell HDMR 1st Gen, which was a bargain at like 800$, the SWFA SS, etc.No one knows what the real failure rate was except vortex and you need to put things in perspective. At the time, there was NOTHING comparable for even twice the price of the gen 1 PST. You have to look at things in the context of the time and market. It was still better than a MK4 and the NXS was the only other thing better at 3 times the price.
You have no idea how the LHT will pan out. 3 random assholes on the internet bitching about it when there are Thousands of these optics out in the wild and its been out for less than a year means nothing. Does the LHD have a reputation problem or was it the most popular mid range hunting scope for the last X years? Its a fucking hunting optic, not a 50oz beast designed to be dropped from 6 feet and handle 50 cal recoil.
Tech becomes obsolete and better shit replaces it. Surprised? Not really.
Its popular now to take shots at vortex and the shitheels with no skin in the game are the loudest voices. They should be ignored on principle.
st, DMR was and is a great optic but launched at 1500, it wasn't that cheap until way down the road once the XRS II, DMR II, and later the pro series hit. When the PST first released it broke the mold on budget options offering features that at the time didn't exist in that price segment. I think SWFA is probably a fair argument, the 5-20 has been around for a long long time though I can't recall the SWFA then. I can for sure say the HDMR wasn't really a thing then. The articles posted on Demigodllc about tactical rifle scopes were in 2009 when it was really just Schmidt/Hendsolt, USO, NF, Leupold MK4, then everything else. I say all this because that is the year I got into shooting.Plenty of scopes in early 2010s were suitable such as the Bushnell HDMR 1st Gen, which was a bargain at like 800$, the SWFA SS, etc.
Yea I am a shill, over here shooting ZCO and TT.0.50$ have been deposited in your account shill. Plenty of scopes in early 2010s were suitable such as the Bushnell HDMR 1st Gen, which was a bargain at like 800$, the SWFA SS, etc.
And yes I’d expect a hunting optic to be able to handle being carried around without loosing its zero. I didn’t get too upset when my LHT HD shit the bed because I was at the range 2 weeks before start of the hunting season but I would have been absolutely pissed off if I lost/injured an animal cause this “hunting scope” can’t handle 0.5g of just being bounced around my back on a sling.
And I’m sure Vortex knows exactly the failure rate of the PST. Geee I wonder why they totally redesigned the Gen 2 and made them 25-50% heavier.
And as anecdotal as it may, every single one of my PST failed, and everyone I know that had a PST failed. None of these guys hate Vortex, neither do I. In fact I bought a used Razor Gen 2 couple of weeks ago for the wife because she doesn’t mind the extra weight and I know it it’ll track and won’t loose it’s zero if the wind blows on it more than 15mph.
Also there are plenty of shooters that strap these vortex scopes on ARs with a chinesium bipod attached to a non free float hand guard and are happy with their minute of pizza box accuracy with the performance of their Diamond back and would never notice if the scope tracks or not, loose it’s zero or not, as they sling 55gr American eagle down the range.
LOW makes optics to whatever spec the manufacturers pay for. Not everything that comes from LOW is the same.What bugs me is that perception of brands have that pretty much become nothing more than echoing banter. Like Vortex's products don't work and people have to use the warranty all the time when discussing their Japanese made stuff. Which is speccd from LOW, which is where NF is made lol. That's the irony of it all.
The 5-20 SWFA was around $1300, significantly more than a PST which I think were like 650-750ish. Your options were basically pay a ton for a IOR that had a 50% chance of failing within a month, Spend $2500+ for a S&B, Premier or USO who at the time was starting to circle the drain in quality. MK4 were still $1K optics that didn't have matching turrets, were SFP and had poor reticle choices. NXS $1500-2000 and were mostly SFP.The issue at play here is sample size. It's hard to condemn the entire lineup based on a sample size of 1.
I'm more interested in knowing why the testing is considered faulty and if it can induce a failure in any system.
Impact testing is a pretty common standard of practice this day in age for quality optic manufacturing. It's interesting to me because I've had Leupold tell me no-one test their optics as harsh as they do with their impact testing but if he said that on a public forum he would be laughed out of the room because that is not how the brand is perceived. Flip the coin on NF and if you tell someone "my NF broke" they loose their minds as if it's not feasibly possible for that to happen. Looking at you @ma smith lol.
What bugs me is that perception of brands have that pretty much become nothing more than echoing banter. Like Vortex's products don't work and people have to use the warranty all the time when discussing their Japanese made stuff. Which is speccd from LOW, which is where NF is made lol. That's the irony of it all. These are pretty much nothing more than anecdotal stereotypes that have spread like wildfire through the community and not really based on any statistical analysis that proves the statements themselves. It's all hearsay.
I'm sure that will be taken as me defending Vortex but that's not my intention more so that they should be judged fairly in the price bracket the optic sits in according to their competitors. Do I like Vortex? Obviously, I run (coincidentally as of now) a good bit of their optics, because for the money they're putting out products that really satisfy a lot of niche applications. Having said that if the LHT is faulty it should be on full display as such and they should own up to it, but one test isn't indicative of the entire lineup. If that is the case you wouldn't be able to own an optic on the market because the reality is favorite brand or not, best friend owns the company, whatever, it's man made, shit happens.
If I can ever get some time on my hands (unlikely) I'll try and put mine through it's paces. I should've thrown it on the 7SS and ran the hell out of it.
st, DMR was and is a great optic but launched at 1500, it wasn't that cheap until way down the road once the XRS II, DMR II, and later the pro series hit. When the PST first released it broke the mold on budget options offering features that at the time didn't exist in that price segment. I think SWFA is probably a fair argument, the 5-20 has been around for a long long time though I can't recall the SWFA then. I can for sure say the HDMR wasn't really a thing then. The articles posted on Demigodllc about tactical rifle scopes were in 2009 when it was really just Schmidt/Hendsolt, USO, NF, Leupold MK4, then everything else. I say all this because that is the year I got into shooting.
Having said that it doesn't discount the failure rate of the PST gen I which idk if it's been quoted I'm sure was pretty damn high. PST Gen II I think was quoted at less than 5% though which is a major improvement.
I never said otherwise. That much is obvious to anyone that remotely understands the designs of optics. My point was about the perception of these companies.LOW makes optics to whatever spec the manufacturers pay for. Not everything that comes from LOW is the same.
Agreed. I ran the hell out of my XRS II and besides glass they were great optics. Absolute work horses. I actually traded the mark 6 I lamented about earlier for the XRS II. I do remember a KYL stage that had a 4" circle at the end with no paint on it in the shade and couldn't see it with my XRS II.I also had one of the first Bushnell DMR (Not H since Horus sucks) and they were game changers in quality and features but were still $1500. They did have significant drawbacks in the glass department but otherwise were as rock solid as they come.
This is true and a good point. However, LOW like any high end OEM has their own standard of producing quality so they maintain their status/business reputation. Your right there is variation, but they aren't gonna produce junk or low quality if a company wants them too. It has to be within their established standard, minimal specs and tolerances. This or course does not mean there won't be lemons or mistakes, just that they won't produce an inferior product for a company to help that company gain a profit while knowing it's trash or an incapable overall design or build.LOW makes optics to whatever spec the manufacturers pay for. Not everything that comes from LOW is the same.
I don’t think this is the case. $$$ talks, especially with a volume manufacturer. Not many people know where or by whom their scope is made. LOW scopes are always badged by someone else.This is true and a good point. However, LOW like any high end OEM has their own standard of producing quality so they maintain their status/business reputation. Your right there is variation, but they aren't gonna produce junk or low quality if a company wants them too. It has to be within their established standard, minimal specs and tolerances. This or course does not mean there won't be lemons or mistakes, just that they won't produce an inferior product for a company to help that company gain a profit while knowing it's trash or an incapable overall design or build.
I hear you..I disagree to a degree as far as upper end manufacturers, as not just anyone can have their optics made in these OEMs, it requires relationships, trust and ability to equally produce something that makes them both residual money. Producing junk intentionally for high prices that break will do that for neither in the long term. But on the other hand what your saying about money talking generally is true, and I do not know personally the inner workings of LOW, just some things I've heard others talk about who should know. I wonder if anyone with more insider knowledge could shed some light on this? I am interested.I don’t think this is the case. $$$ talks, especially with a volume manufacturer. Not many people know where or by whom their scope is made. LOW scopes are always badged by someone else.
You should just go back to Rokslide and keep humping legsIs telling people to test their own shit, and laying out the guidelines for doing so telling them to “trust the science?” Who form is doesn’t matter in the slightest if other people are testing their gear and seeing what works on their own.
As you’re aware, another forum member took it upon himself to do his own testing (filmed) and got the same result as form with the RS.3. Unsurprisingly, his SHV did fine.
There are people here with legitimate concerns and questions. They should go read the sub-forum and draw their own conclusions. You have drawn yours, and are attempting to discredit the results however you can.
TLDR passing the OEM vortex test means nothing unless its the same test.
Ive never heard of an OEM doing lateral / orthogonal to line of sight impact testing.
Probably why so many scopes fail...
I dont think anyone has said that they think the LHT is going to be as durable or "bomb proof" as the beast Razor g2 or g3. Obviously these scopes are built differently for different purposes. All that was said about LOW is they are a top manufacturer and it's hard to believe they would just peddle junk just because Vortex asks them too like some have implied, or that Vortex is intentionally putting out junk then lying about it. It's all possible, but at this point no solid evidence that can be verified has been given so it's just peoples opinions and bias' are showing up pretty easily. I get it if people have had an optic go down from said company, everyone is going to be less likely to trust it who that happens too. Also sometimes people just dislike certain brands, it's fine, but one thing that is going on in this thread by many is trying to search for the truth and not let biased emotions lead them in decisions that are extremely expensive and people take a lot of time investing in. This isn't about bashing or not bashing any brand or company for me, I'm trying to see if this scope has a real durability issue from light use(as was stated by the original tester) and if so is it a one off or an issue across this line. Im still waiting for valid evidence to appear to give me a reason to sell it if needed. I can test mine, yes and I will. But even that is a sample size of 1, I could just send it in and have it fixed easily if there was an issue, I want to see and hear about others testing their stuff too. But it's so hard to find the truth nowadays, especially on the internet. People do weird things for attention/money and ultimately this whole thing on rokslide doesn't pass the smell test so far, but I am willing to change my mind if/when some better documentation and someone who is willing to put their name on the line for their testing comes forth. Honestly, at this point it's he said she said and not much more.This thread is crazy.
Razor G2 turrets are not LOW factory turrets, they are higher spec, AMG or some part of Vortex reworked something to get them to perform.
That is to Vortex credit, because the Data from Mark and Frank showed the did well.
However, it kills the notion that any LOW scope is by default "just as good" as g2 or NF.
That people keep thinking a 22 oz 1200 scope with 950 price point turrets is "just as good" as the $2-3000 g2/g3 Razor is border line crazy.
Not sure its worth trying to reason any further.
Just admit you have no rebuttal, nothing constructive to add. Your entire argument is “show me your face, internet man!” Go put some energy into discrediting the guy who publicly tested his Maven, with their blessing, and got the same result.You should just go back to Rokslide and keep humping legs
No one said its just as good. No one said all LOW optics are the same.This thread is crazy.
Razor G2 turrets are not LOW factory turrets, they are higher spec, AMG or some part of Vortex reworked something to get them to perform.
That is to Vortex credit, because the Data from Mark and Frank showed the did well.
However, it kills the notion that any LOW scope is by default "just as good" as g2 or NF.
That people keep thinking a 22 oz 1200 scope with 950 price point turrets is "just as good" as the $2-3000 g2/g3 Razor is border line crazy.
Not sure its worth trying to reason any further.
Again, how many Vortex LHT do you own? Answer the question.Just admit you have no rebuttal, nothing constructive to add. Your entire argument is “show me your face, internet man!” Go put some energy into discrediting the guy who publicly tested his Maven, with their blessing, and got the same result.