OP - you asked about the Rifleman line - I am sure that was their "discount" version - bottom of their line - likely 3 piece body, and so on. Has been posted on CGN that that line should not even be called a "Leupold", or was a "sorry example" of a Leupold, or similar. I have never owned one, so I do not actually know - just relying on comments that were posted here.
So I understand with the Vari-X line as you go up from 1(I) to 3(III) you go up in quality and maybe toughness. But where do the Freedom and Rifleman etc. lines fit in to all this?
Thanks! Kevin
In the 'old' days .. Leupolds optical quality may have been a step up from the old El Paso Weavers ...but only a small step. Personally I thought the Scopechief IV scopes were superior optically to the Leupolds of the same era.
Great info! Thanks everyone!
No one mentioned the Freedom line? Also how do you I.D. the counterfeit Leupolds?
Great info! Thanks everyone!
No one mentioned the Freedom line? Also how do you I.D. the counterfeit Leupolds?
Regarding "Freedom" line - see Post #2 - is about same information posted on CGN a while ago by Leupold Warranty centre - "Korth" - Leupold wanted to slim down the number of scopes that they made - various features of other previous scopes all rolled together to make the "Freedom". I own a number of the rimfire versions, but no centre fire ones.
Is a curious thing about "optics" - I think there is "optical quality" and then more than one way to get there - I assume some of the German made scopes here from 1950's / 1960's have equivalent or better "view" - to take your breath away with the clarity and colour rendition - but likely cost 10 x as much to do today as the Freedom scopes.
Then there is the seals, the turret mechanisms, etc. that can not be seen in a store. I am from very old days of "set and forget" - was often quite a battle to finally get a scope "sighted in" - is not unusual to see us "old dudes" tapping on a turret after adjusting it - to make the guts actually move to the new setting - I suspect many of the internals were not highly polished and would "hang up" - so once you got it, you tended not to want to fuss with it any more. Versus some shooters who seem to want to twirl turrets for virtually every shot - would take a different internal system for those two extremes, I think.
Great info! Thanks everyone!
No one mentioned the Freedom line? Also how do you I.D. the counterfeit Leupolds?
Potashminer,
I remember Peter Capstick, in one of his safari books, explaining that after he had a client dialed in, he would tap on the turrets with a .375 cartridge and then recheck the zero. he believed that sometimes the adjustments would hang up, as you said.




























