Buy the cheapest POS you can find. Discover after some use that you threw your money away, plus the money for ammo to sight in, test for suspected failures, ammo to run through the test scope that you use to verify that the first has indeed died and finally ammo to sight in the replacement or if you're particularly stubborn the warranty return. Don't forget to add postage. Repeat process until you realize that bargain optics are no bargain and you decide to spend some money. Its best if you don't figure it out to fast because hard lessons stick better. Conversely; you don't want to drag the lesson out so long that you resort to drugs and alcohol and sink into the pits of despair. That's seldom good, and could even have adverse affects on your shooting.
Although there is no law that says you have to follow this system, everyone else did it and why should you be smarter than everyone else?
With any luck at all you can repeat the process with binos, spotting scopes and range finders. This will lead to many days of enjoyment.............................................................well, maybe not enjoyment, you know the other one, the opposite of enjoyment.
If there was $100 scope that was the equal of a $400 scope, they would change the price-tag to $400 and it wouldn't a $100 scope anymore. If a scope wont sell at $400 they can drop the price or quit making it. Optics are priced by what the market will stand.
Optics, or rather lens coatings have improved over the years. There's only so much you can do to with a lens, they've been grinding those for centuries and theres only so many ways you can bend light.
The trouble is a scope isn't a bird watching device, its a rifle sight. It either holds zero or it doesn't. It either tracks or it doesn't. The adjustment increments bear some resemblance to reality or they don't. It fogs up or it doesn't. Parallax is acceptable or its not. Its either broken or its not. It either works or it doesn't. If you're lucky it'll be something glaringly obvious like the crosshairs turning sideways so you're not left guessing whether the problem is gun, load, scope or too much coffee. Some of these faults are more important to some users than others.
Few people call their hunting trip short because their scope transmits 1% less light than they wish. Colour and definition don't help put the bullets in the V ring. Most of the things in the second paragraph will mess you right up.
Forums are interesting and entertaining. They aren't always as informative as we'd like them to be. If I see one more "I bought a brand X scope and I shot 2 boxes of shells through it and nothing fell off so they are all great and I'm a genius and everyone in the history of optics that ever spent more money than I did is a retard and if I can ever save enough money for another box of bullets I'm sure that it will hold zero forever and never break and I know this 'cause I'm a genius and not because I've had more than one scope in my life" post I'm going to snap.
It gets worse, since the people who buy the cheapest scopes are the least qualified to assess them and the least likely to shoot them much. That's just the way it is.
Optics, or rather lens coatings have improved over the years. There's only so much you can do to with a lens, they've been grinding those for centuries and theres only so many ways you can bend light.
The trouble is a scope isn't a bird watching device, its a rifle sight. It either holds zero or it doesn't. It either tracks or it doesn't. The adjustment increments bear some resemblance to reality or they don't. It fogs up or it doesn't. Parallax is acceptable or its not. Its either broken or its not. It either works or it doesn't. If you're lucky it'll be something glaringly obvious like the crosshairs turning sideways so you're not left guessing whether the problem is gun, load, scope or too much coffee. Some of these faults are more important to some users than others.
Few people call their hunting trip short because their scope transmits 1% less light than they wish. Colour and definition don't help put the bullets in the V ring. Most of the things in the second paragraph will mess you right up.
Forums are interesting and entertaining. They aren't always as informative as we'd like them to be. If I see one more "I bought a brand X scope and I shot 2 boxes of shells through it and nothing fell off so they are all great and I'm a genius and everyone in the history of optics that ever spent more money than I did is a retard and if I can ever save enough money for another box of bullets I'm sure that it will hold zero forever and never break and I know this 'cause I'm a genius and not because I've had more than one scope in my life" post I'm going to snap.
It gets worse, since the people who buy the cheapest scopes are the least qualified to assess them and the least likely to shoot them much. That's just the way it is.
Buy the cheapest POS you can find. Discover after some use that you threw your money away, plus the money for ammo to sight in, test for suspected failures, ammo to run through the test scope that you use to verify that the first has indeed died and finally ammo to sight in the replacement or if you're particularly stubborn the warranty return. Don't forget to add postage. Repeat process until you realize that bargain optics are no bargain and you decide to spend some money. Its best if you don't figure it out to fast because hard lessons stick better. Conversely; you don't want to drag the lesson out so long that you resort to drugs and alcohol and sink into the pits of despair. That's seldom good, and could even have adverse affects on your shooting.
Although there is no law that says you have to follow this system, everyone else did it and why should you be smarter than everyone else?
With any luck at all you can repeat the process with binos, spotting scopes and range finders. This will lead to many days of enjoyment.............................................................well, maybe not enjoyment, you know the other one, the opposite of enjoyment.



























