Re: What does a $1k plus scope get me over $300 NIKON
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: MattK287</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> "I believe the amount of cash one spends on an optic is directly proportionate to what is at stake if that optic fails"</div></div>
I would take a $300 SWFA fixed Super Sniper over ANY $1,000 hunting scope for durability, reliability and consistency.
Man people just love to wax eloquently about "glass". Truth is- when it comes to killing things, once you get to a certain point, glass "clarity" is more for visual pleasure then for increasing killing performance. I taught a class last year and had over 30K dollars worth of scopes sitting on a table all lined up. We had scopes from Nightforce, Leupold, Zeiss, Bushnell, Burris, Weaver, SWFA Super Snipers, Vortex Razers,Swarovski, etc. Everything from a Zeiss Diavari FL 6-24x72 to a $150 Bushnell 10x40 Tactical. Everyone there thought there would be some huge advantage in hunting with the $3000 dollar glass over the rest. Except for the Bushnell fixed 10x we set all the scopes on 6x (because we had several Leupold fixed 6's) and compared them side by side looking at deer on a hillside just over 400 yards away. Every optic there was good enough to kill well past legal shooting light. The Burris FFII 3-9x40 unanimously went "out" first. Then the Weaver Super Slam. After that when no one could see well enough to place the crosshairs on the deer with the Leupold fixed 6x's, you couldn't see well enough to do it with the Zeiss 6-24x72 Diavari either. Of course turning up the power helped for a couple more minutes. I believe there was around 3-4 minutes difference between the Diavari's turned up and the Leupold 6x's when it came to ability to adequately see the animal and place the reticle on it. Both were WELL past legal light.
Don't get me wrong during the day you can diffidently tell a difference between optics in clarity, contrast, resolution, etc. And if you hunt at night like the Europeans you can also. However for the 30 minutes plus or minus sunrise/sunset of legal hunting time in the US it just doesn't matter.
My pards and I hunt a lot and do A LOT of killing, and the scopes we use the most are Leupold fixed 6x's, SWFA SS 3-9x40's, and the Nightforce 2.5-10x32's. None of use have ever been able to tell a difference in "brightness" on a hunt.