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Brightest Scope at Dawn and at Dusk / Moon Light?
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<blockquote data-quote="Rifleman97" data-source="post: 2049471" data-attributes="member: 103996"><p>The Nikon monarch (when they were making it) was usually around $250-300 and claimed 95% light transmission. So does multiple of the sub $300 Bushnell's. I remember a vortex advertising the same thing.</p><p>The best way to have bright pictures is to increase the area that the light can go through. 95% of a small area (small objective and small tube) doesn't get terribly bright to my eyes. 95% of a huge objective and big tube (35-40mm) appears a lot brighter to me, even when both claim 95-98% transmission.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Rifleman97, post: 2049471, member: 103996"] The Nikon monarch (when they were making it) was usually around $250-300 and claimed 95% light transmission. So does multiple of the sub $300 Bushnell’s. I remember a vortex advertising the same thing. The best way to have bright pictures is to increase the area that the light can go through. 95% of a small area (small objective and small tube) doesn’t get terribly bright to my eyes. 95% of a huge objective and big tube (35-40mm) appears a lot brighter to me, even when both claim 95-98% transmission. [/QUOTE]
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Brightest Scope at Dawn and at Dusk / Moon Light?
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