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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
2020-best long range scope
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<blockquote data-quote="FTRshooter" data-source="post: 1804149" data-attributes="member: 112707"><p>I don't know much about long range hunting, so I'm hoping to learn more about it here. On the other hand I know a great deal about optics and long range shooting competition, so I'm hoping that knowledge is transferable.</p><p></p><p>The riflescope on my rifle right now is a March-X 5-50X56. I've had it close to 6 years now and it's steered close to 20,000 rounds in competition, without a burp. I've shot about 100 local matches, 6 Nationals, 12 State and 2 Worlds with my current setup. (Been through 4 barrels.)</p><p></p><p>Now, my loads are nowhere the recoil of a 338-378, but the rifle is unbraked and shot from prone. My bullet of choice was 210 gr .308 for the longest time and I recently moved up to a 230gr bullet. The recoil accumulates over time. I can tell you that after a 10 day World competition, my shoulder is tender.</p><p></p><p>The scope never burped or had issues. I selected this March-X because they are built like tanks, their main tubes are 4mm thick instead of 2mm like the Nightforces and others. They are machined from bar stock aluminum, not pressure molded, (they do that for all their scopes.) The glass is ED and the minimum focus is 10 yards. I usually run it at 40X and the ED glass helps me with the mirage. The really neat thing, and this is important in my chosen discipline, is that the weight of this scope is only 31 ounces, a full half pound less than my Nighforce NXS 12-42X56 and a **** sight brighter.</p><p></p><p>March now has Super-ED glass in their newer scopes and that's a tic better IQ than even my current one.</p><p></p><p>For long range shooting, I am a believer in ED and Super ED glass to tame the CA inherent in high magnification scopes, especially if you're going to spend a lot of time looking through the scope, like we do in F-class competition.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="FTRshooter, post: 1804149, member: 112707"] I don't know much about long range hunting, so I'm hoping to learn more about it here. On the other hand I know a great deal about optics and long range shooting competition, so I'm hoping that knowledge is transferable. The riflescope on my rifle right now is a March-X 5-50X56. I've had it close to 6 years now and it's steered close to 20,000 rounds in competition, without a burp. I've shot about 100 local matches, 6 Nationals, 12 State and 2 Worlds with my current setup. (Been through 4 barrels.) Now, my loads are nowhere the recoil of a 338-378, but the rifle is unbraked and shot from prone. My bullet of choice was 210 gr .308 for the longest time and I recently moved up to a 230gr bullet. The recoil accumulates over time. I can tell you that after a 10 day World competition, my shoulder is tender. The scope never burped or had issues. I selected this March-X because they are built like tanks, their main tubes are 4mm thick instead of 2mm like the Nightforces and others. They are machined from bar stock aluminum, not pressure molded, (they do that for all their scopes.) The glass is ED and the minimum focus is 10 yards. I usually run it at 40X and the ED glass helps me with the mirage. The really neat thing, and this is important in my chosen discipline, is that the weight of this scope is only 31 ounces, a full half pound less than my Nighforce NXS 12-42X56 and a **** sight brighter. March now has Super-ED glass in their newer scopes and that's a tic better IQ than even my current one. For long range shooting, I am a believer in ED and Super ED glass to tame the CA inherent in high magnification scopes, especially if you're going to spend a lot of time looking through the scope, like we do in F-class competition. [/QUOTE]
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Long Range Scopes and Other Optics
2020-best long range scope
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