For the majority of my coyote hunts they come running in and i shoot them at 200 yards or less. There are times though when those buggers hang up at around 500 yards and just sit there. I think a turret would be a decent option, especially one that has a zero stop to always get you back quickly if its bumped or used.
I've got a really good shooting .243 I worked on to be able start taking the longer shots. I'm piss poor at holding over with out some type of aide.
Kinda driving me nuts figuring out what to get as there are so many opinions
on scopes from reticles to focal planes to turrets ect.....
I still can get a Ziess Conquest 4.5-14x44 Z800 for well over a hundred less the a Vortex Viper PST 4-16x50 FFP MOA. Decisions!!!
Cheers!!
I've owned and played with Conquests, regular Vipers, Viper PST's, various high-end Leupolds, etc, and if you're putting together a heavier, long-range oriented .243, then I'd get the PST. If you want to put together a sporter-weight carry rifle that you use for mobile calling, and that you plan on hiking with a fair bit, then I wouldn't get either of those scopes. I'd just grab a Leupold FX3 6x42 with M1 elevation turret, and call it a day.
My longest coyote kill was at 942 yards with a 3-9x40 Burris FFII Tactical. I was just smacking an 8" rock a couple of days ago at 800 yards with a 6x42 and M1 elevation turret. Similar scopes work great on close-mid range rigs that can get it done at LR in a pinch. I really love the PST on a rig that is a dedicated LR rifle, but that can get it done at short range in a pinch.
The best part about the FFP and reticle options that the PST comes with is not the ability to hold over your target for elevation, but the ability to hold off for wind consistently, at all magnifications, and the ability to get a quick range on your target if the RF fails or the battery dies, or it just plain won't give a reading for some reason. The reticle is clearly marked in either MOA or mRad, which is nice.
The PST glass is better than the HS or regular Viper glass, for sure, so don't judge it based on what regular Viper glass looks like.
I would also add that the PST is a long-range oriented scope, and the 4-16x50 can do the job at close and long range, but is more at home at LR. So if you're not concerned about the LR stuff, then it's probably not the best choice. If you are thinking about long-range shooting, then it's a better scope than the Conquest.