For what it's worth, a good buddy of mine has one on his 270 and it refuses to lose zero. Bump around in the side by side, the truck, dropping it on gravel roads. Thing just won't miss.
Take a look at RITON as well; I have been running one for three years on a 6.5 x 55 and another on a 455 benchrest .22 for about a year. Both clear, track 100% and in my opinion comparable to Vortex for (some times considerably) less money. Lifetime transferrable warrantee, and I have yet to hear of anyone who has had to use it.I don’t know about scorpion but i second the referral for Burris and vortex. Excellent bang for the buck, never had any trouble with them, good clarity and they hold zero. I also know Burris honor their warranty - even though it was my fault that time.
While true, their "budget" stuff is nothing to write home about.Vortex Crossfire 3-9 would be a great choice, in my opinion.
I had one on a 10/22 and it was great. Cost me less than $200, good quality and you'll never worry about knocking it around or breaking it. Buy once, cry once.
Vortex optics are easily affordable for anyone who shoots regularly and they offer many different price point options to suit your needs and budget too. All their optics offer a solid mix of quality/reliability vs price and with their unconditional warranty program, it's a no brainer for me on most (not all) of my guns.
Nobody is saying it is... so you're basically talking to yourself here.While true, their "budget" stuff is nothing to write home about.
Try Arken optics .Awesome this helps a bunch, thanks for all the replies!
And fan-boys will be fan boys. There are alternatives now that are as good as or better than the brand with the big promotional budget. Let's keep an open mind.Nobody is saying it is... so you're basically talking to yourself here.
It's the cheapest line they offer, of course it's not something to write home about. I would argue no scope under $500 is worth writing home about but the OP asked for a budget .22 scope, so that is what was suggested.