Try a little drop of dish washing liquid and wipe it all over the lens.
4 words...butler creek flip caps.
done, end of story, and you're welcome![]()
I hate Rain-X with a passion... It is one of the few things I refuse to put on my car. It streaks like crazy, and it's near impossible to clean when it gets smeared. Using it on an optic is the last thing I'd do.
Having said that... Shaving cream is supposed to work for keeping your mirror fog-free, so it may work for you, or try the dishwashing detergent. However, detergents are specifically formulated to strip oils off of things, so if your optic has some sort of oil-based coating then I would stay away from it. There are also some eyeglass cleaners that may work, but it's something you'd probably have to risk trying out... If it's a nice scope, and you can't afford to replace it, I wouldn't do it.
Have you considered getting some transparent objective caps and putting a coating on them? They're relatively cheap, they'll prevent mud/dirt from getting on the lenses while in the field, and you can wipe them down if they get dirty. Plus, if you destroy them, you can easily replace them.
4 words...butler creek flip caps.
done, end of story, and you're welcome![]()
Ouch... Sorry to hear. As much as people make fun of our "winters", they certainly are a PITA, especially when it's slushing on you for hours...
Have you considered getting some actual glass lenses cut for the scope, installing them in covers, and then using Rainex (or some wax) on them? So rather than putting the stuff directly on your optics, having a second sheet of glass over-top and using that. Or, figure out some way to heat your scope and just have the snow melt right off...
There's gotta be some solution.
Their was a thread on the Campfire a few years ago about the same thing. A guy emailed Leupold and they told him sure, no problem. Not sure if I'd do it myself. I'll see if I can dig it out.

Ive tried everything , Buttler creeks , my night force covers , the transparent covers , leupold aluminum covers , Ive tried going with out covers ... which has worked the best
I hunt Blacktail hard on the Island ... we all have some sort of an answer , none of which are even close to perfect
Ive answered every gear question ive ever had for myself over the years except being able to keep scopes clear in torrential down pour mixed with snow.
Ive even run iron sights ... but the back one can get clogged with snow, or an ice bead will form on them through out the day leaving you high and dry in the heat of the moment
Thats what I have on my hunting rifle, I like them, other than Ive lost about three of them while in the bush.
Geez man, you hunt about 100x harder than I even dream about hunting, my biggest problem is keeping falling snow off the lens while i sit, and the occasional fogging
so if irons aren't reliable enough for you're hunting style how will a scope ever hope to be![]()



























