I'm all for lower powered scopes, as I've had the situation where my scope was on too high power to make the clean shot, but never had issue the other way around. My preference would be 4x.
Ivor
Yep, 4 or 6x....
I'm all for lower powered scopes, as I've had the situation where my scope was on too high power to make the clean shot, but never had issue the other way around. My preference would be 4x.
Ivor
There's nothing "wrong" with fixed power scopes, I have a couple I really like, but the days of fixed having any real advantages over variables are long gone.
Way back when, variables were fragile and finicky things, but no longer.
Even the size and weight advantages of fixed scopes are very small; so much that most hunters could never tell in real world situations.
Putting a $300 fixed on a 300 win mag thinking it will be sturdier than a $300 variable is about fifty years behind the reality of todays scopes.
If you just like a fixed scope that's fine, but just be honest and admit that's your personal preference.
No matter how you look at it, a variable costs more for the manufacturer to make than a fixed. If the scopes both retail for the same amount of money, I'm confident the fixed will be better quality than the variable.
No matter how you look at it, a variable costs more for the manufacturer to make than a fixed. If the scopes both retail for the same amount of money, I'm confident the fixed will be better quality than the variable.
No matter how you look at it, a variable costs more for the manufacturer to make than a fixed. If the scopes both retail for the same amount of money, I'm confident the fixed will be better quality than the variable.




























