Sometimes you need to find things out for yourself....I wanted to know about the relative twilight brightness of the five hunting scopes that I actually regularly use...all have more or less the same reticle: variations on the German #4. Three are low-power variables and two are 4X, so I set them all on 4X. I put them on a box aimed at the same buildings and trees in the distance as the sun went down behind me. The Japanese Bushnell Scopechief VI 1.5-4.5X "went out" first, followed by a Zeiss Diatal-C 4X, then aNikon Monarch 1-4X, then my old favorite Swarovski Habicht 4X32 A 4X, then a Meopta Meostar R2 1-6X24 (the only 30mm, all the rest are 1 in.). The Swarovski has been my go-to standard for many years, with what I thought was great color and resolution at dawn and dusk (at least compared to the 4X Leupolds I once used) and it hung in with the Meopta for quite awhile as it grew dark but it also finally "went out", the image dimming and blurring while the Meopta was still bright with a very clear sharp image. This test proves little about the relative brightness of other scopes made by these various brands, just the relative twilight brightness of my specific scopes, and thats what I wanted to know.


















































