After doing much homework and looking at scopes at local hunting stores, I think I've narrowed it down to (but open to suggestions) the Nikon Monarch 3 series. It is in my sweet spot for budget and the eye box on them is actually pretty forgiving.
Now my dilemma is which model to get between 1-4, 2-8 or 2.5-10 power settings.
Parameters:
- Weapon of choice is a lever 30-30, target would be varmints from groundhog to coyote/wolf - and whitetail
- Locations can vary from heavy brush, trails and the odd open field (farms for dealing with varmints)
- My eyesight is excellent
My thoughts:
- 1-4 is excellent for the 1 setting which gives the fastest shouldered aim for near targets. The 4 settings is good for large targets up to 150-200 yards for me. But also the 4 range is a bit on the limited side for smaller targets and shot placement.
- 2-8 offers the middle ground, where the 2 setting seems like it would be fine, however I have never used a 2x scope in the woods before so I can't say how fast I could shoulder and aim/find a smaller target through leaves. The 8 power is perfect up to about 100 yards for any target size.
- 2.5-10 increases the low power to 2.5, but that seems almost negligible compared to 2x.. maybe not much of a difference at all when it comes to practical uses. The upper end 10x would extend my small target range up to about 150 yards, and outperform the 30-30's ballistics on a large deer sized target.
My main concern would be about the 2-2.5 range and the acquired targets in the brush...
What say you gunnutz?
Now my dilemma is which model to get between 1-4, 2-8 or 2.5-10 power settings.
Parameters:
- Weapon of choice is a lever 30-30, target would be varmints from groundhog to coyote/wolf - and whitetail
- Locations can vary from heavy brush, trails and the odd open field (farms for dealing with varmints)
- My eyesight is excellent
My thoughts:
- 1-4 is excellent for the 1 setting which gives the fastest shouldered aim for near targets. The 4 settings is good for large targets up to 150-200 yards for me. But also the 4 range is a bit on the limited side for smaller targets and shot placement.
- 2-8 offers the middle ground, where the 2 setting seems like it would be fine, however I have never used a 2x scope in the woods before so I can't say how fast I could shoulder and aim/find a smaller target through leaves. The 8 power is perfect up to about 100 yards for any target size.
- 2.5-10 increases the low power to 2.5, but that seems almost negligible compared to 2x.. maybe not much of a difference at all when it comes to practical uses. The upper end 10x would extend my small target range up to about 150 yards, and outperform the 30-30's ballistics on a large deer sized target.
My main concern would be about the 2-2.5 range and the acquired targets in the brush...
What say you gunnutz?


















































