Admissions of a High-Magnification Scope Fanatic
I admit that I'm always lusting after scopes with relatively high magnification.
I'm always on the lookout for a 4-24x56 FFP scope I can afford.
And I admit that I looked down on hunters using small 3-9x magnifications.
Now after last weeks pigeon shoot I had to face reality and admit something....
I explain:
Last week I visited a couple of cow corrals and liberated the farmers of 75 feed-stealing, defecating pests. And I really really liked my Falcon 3-18x50 FFP for helping me do it.
But I have to admit that I lost a good amount of shots because I was busy with all the bells and whistles of that scope.
A big time waster was trying to dial it up to maximum magnification instead of leaving it on a medium setting and letting "good enough" be just that: "good enough."
And I have to admit that at my biggest pigeon bash ever the largest amount of critters (3/4) were taken with my "backup gun" running a 3-12x44 scope. Yeah, sure, that the gun was smaller and lighter had something to do with it, too.
But I have stopped looking down an 3-9x and 3-12x magnification scopes.
Because I realize that most shots are at a range where these magnification ranges are sufficient!
Now, in my defense for higher magnification scopes:
▪ My eyes aren't the youngest anymore!
▪ It's nice to have a pigeon fill my scope image from edge to edge.... But there is NO NEED for it.
▪ And it's nice to be able to go to 100 yard target shooting and be able to see your impacts with the same scope that took pigeons at 20y. But then I need to learn to discipline myself and not always first search and acquire the critter at a low magnification, and then dial it up to high mangification....
▪ And it's nice to be ready for those hunting shots at the way-out-there range requiring a high magnification. But those shots actually happen mostly in my imagination, NOT in the field....
Another conclusion I draw from this experience:
Since I use alround-guns with alround-scopes meaning they have to do a little bit of everything — I do not want a scope that has less than a 30ft field of view.
(That means if I still want a higher magnification....: The 6-24x and 5-25x are out. 4-24x seems ideal, 4-20x and 3-18x also work well.)
What are your experiences? What do you think?
Matthias
I admit that I'm always lusting after scopes with relatively high magnification.
I'm always on the lookout for a 4-24x56 FFP scope I can afford.
And I admit that I looked down on hunters using small 3-9x magnifications.
Now after last weeks pigeon shoot I had to face reality and admit something....
I explain:
Last week I visited a couple of cow corrals and liberated the farmers of 75 feed-stealing, defecating pests. And I really really liked my Falcon 3-18x50 FFP for helping me do it.
But I have to admit that I lost a good amount of shots because I was busy with all the bells and whistles of that scope.
A big time waster was trying to dial it up to maximum magnification instead of leaving it on a medium setting and letting "good enough" be just that: "good enough."
And I have to admit that at my biggest pigeon bash ever the largest amount of critters (3/4) were taken with my "backup gun" running a 3-12x44 scope. Yeah, sure, that the gun was smaller and lighter had something to do with it, too.
But I have stopped looking down an 3-9x and 3-12x magnification scopes.
Because I realize that most shots are at a range where these magnification ranges are sufficient!
Now, in my defense for higher magnification scopes:
▪ My eyes aren't the youngest anymore!
▪ It's nice to have a pigeon fill my scope image from edge to edge.... But there is NO NEED for it.
▪ And it's nice to be able to go to 100 yard target shooting and be able to see your impacts with the same scope that took pigeons at 20y. But then I need to learn to discipline myself and not always first search and acquire the critter at a low magnification, and then dial it up to high mangification....
▪ And it's nice to be ready for those hunting shots at the way-out-there range requiring a high magnification. But those shots actually happen mostly in my imagination, NOT in the field....
Another conclusion I draw from this experience:
Since I use alround-guns with alround-scopes meaning they have to do a little bit of everything — I do not want a scope that has less than a 30ft field of view.
(That means if I still want a higher magnification....: The 6-24x and 5-25x are out. 4-24x seems ideal, 4-20x and 3-18x also work well.)
What are your experiences? What do you think?
Matthias