I picked up a new 4-12x40 scope for my hunting rifle and just learned afterwards that it's 2oz more than the 3-9 version. This makes me think that maybe I can shed more weight by getting a 2-7 or something? Is the weight based off the mag multiplier more than the bell dia? I imagine a 32mm would be lighter than a 40, but not by much seeing as it's still full of air.
Sub 500$, what could I do to cut weight? The crimson trace brushline 2-7x32 with BDC looks like something that would fit the ticket.
I am shooting 180gr .308's out of a 18" barrel (2500fps?) at deer between 50 and 250y. I shoot targets 3-6x/year but may need to just go dedicated rifle or use larger targets (I have an 8" steel plate that we can shoot outside at 250y max. I think this'll still be visible at 7x? I'm always reminded by 9holereviews shooting 1000y with irons and finishing his course easily with a 10x fixed scope.)
Part of me hates the idea of 3-9x and that might just be because its the "default" and I want to be kinda different.
I've also never spent more than 200$ on glass before and am worried that there isn't going to be THAT much of a difference in visual clarity if I spend more. The "best" scope I've ever looked through is a Diamondback 2-7x32 rimfire, and my buddies CT Brushline 3-9.
Sub 500$, what could I do to cut weight? The crimson trace brushline 2-7x32 with BDC looks like something that would fit the ticket.
I am shooting 180gr .308's out of a 18" barrel (2500fps?) at deer between 50 and 250y. I shoot targets 3-6x/year but may need to just go dedicated rifle or use larger targets (I have an 8" steel plate that we can shoot outside at 250y max. I think this'll still be visible at 7x? I'm always reminded by 9holereviews shooting 1000y with irons and finishing his course easily with a 10x fixed scope.)
Part of me hates the idea of 3-9x and that might just be because its the "default" and I want to be kinda different.
I've also never spent more than 200$ on glass before and am worried that there isn't going to be THAT much of a difference in visual clarity if I spend more. The "best" scope I've ever looked through is a Diamondback 2-7x32 rimfire, and my buddies CT Brushline 3-9.