Vector Veyron 6-24 SFP Initial Impressions

I received my new SFP 6-24 Vector Veyron yesterday from Krale. I think I ordered it Saturday. I don't think Krale packs on the weekend. It arrived in great condition as did the 4 tins of JSBs I added to the order after determining it wouldn't increase the shipping cost. Krale was more than a couple bucks/tin lower than the other sources I checked. They are the only source of the SFP Veyron 6-24 I found. It was under $200 delivered.

I mounted it on my P35-22 this morning and shot the gun a few times to get it sighted in. It is windy and cold here today so I did not want to stay out long. I had difficulty with the elevation adjustment and shimmed the back (shooter side) of the picatinny rail with 4 layers of soda can metal (about .020 thickness). That allowed me to get it sighted in. Not sure what was up with that, it is supposed to have a very similar range of elevation adjustment as my other scopes which did not require shimming. I am not a fan of shimming scope rings this way but I think shimming the rail the rings attach to is OK.

I checked the ability to focus at 10 yards and am happy to report it seems to be able to go a tiny bid closer, maybe 9.5 yards. My Vector Sintenel 8-32 is supposed to be able to do 10 too and won't. I am happy the Veyron is not an issue.

My P35s are short, light bullpups and my other scopes seems a bit oversized for them. I was interested in something shorter and lighter which the veyron certainly is. Weight is about 20 ounces which is about 4 ounces lighter than my others.

I have not done a side to side test against the Athlon Talos 6-24 on my P35-177 but my first impression is the glass is similar in quality. I like the Talos and feel it is equivalent for 30 yard target shooting as my 32X Vector Sintenel. So when I say the Veyron seems to be similar I am saying I think it's good, especially considering the price. When the weather gets better I will shoot a 30 yard challenge target or two with it. I don't think it will hold me back.

It has target turrets which lock and are resettable for zero. You lift the turret to make an adjustment then push it back to lock it. To reset the zero you remove a cap, rotate it, and screw it back on. The center dot of the reticle can be illuminated. Clicks are definite and audible. The only things I don't like is the apparent need to shim for elevation, the stiff controls (pretty much all of them, some more than others), and the very limited space available for scope rings. I use one piece bases to make it easier to swap scopes between rifles. It worked but if the available space had been 1/8th inch less it would not have. It comes with flip up scope caps and they work fine.

Bottom line is I think it's a great sub $200 scope especially for a short, light bullpup. I hope it holds up. My Sintenel is about a year old and works fine so I am optimistic. Warranty is 5 years. I've never even looked at the more widely available FFP model. I'm sure it's a nice scope too but it's basically $100 more and I don't want a FFP in a scope with a fine reticle (which the veyron has). With a SFP the reticle is visible at 6X, I do not think it will be in the FFP.

The other two scopes in the first picture are a FFP Primary Arms 4-14 and a SFP Primary Arms 4-15.

Vector Veyron and two Primary Arms.jpg


Vector Veyron 6-24 on P35-22.jpg
 
Jim,
Couldn't agree more, got five 6-24x44, last two from Krale (Optics Dept.) M3, MK3 Wildcat, Uragan 1 and 2, Vulcan 3, no shimming needed. Super subcompact scope caused need for WestHunter scope mounts for proper eye relief on AGT guns, but light weight made all five guns feel totally different. Three FFP, two SFP, fully sold on SFP, MPR-V10 reticle from now on. That 6-shade red IR center dot is also impressive. WM
IMG_20221127_211212 (1).jpg
 
I shot a couple 30 yard challenge targets with the Veyron today. The first one did not go so well, I think it was a 182. But I changed two things since shooting a 197 with this gun with my Arken on top. One change was the scope but I also switched to using my Rock BR front rest. I've shot a 199 with that rest but I do not like shooting from it as much as my normal bipod + home made windage adjustable monopod. So I switched the rest and shot a 192. There was a little breeze so I am OK with that score. It might be a little worse for target shooting than the Arken but I'm not sure of that yet.

I also looked through my Athlon Talos 6-24 to try and see if I think the clarity of the Veyron is as good. I do not think it is but they are close. The Arken is definitely better than either but both the Veyron and the Talos are pretty clear. I can see the 10 ring and the center X dot with all these scopes when they are turned up to 24X. But the image seems sharpest with the Arken, then the Talos, then the Veyron. The Veyron may respond a little better to adjustment than the Talos, however. I've only messed with the turrets to sight it in but they responded well each time. The Talos seems to lag and then jump sometimes.

I remain very pleased with this purchase. Even if I decide the Veyron is not as good for shooting targets at 30 yards it cost the least of any of these scopes and it is good enough that I am the primary limitation. Krale wants about $185 for the Veyron when I looked today and Optics planet has the Talos for $230. I paid $330 for the Arken, not sure where they are these days but I'd be surprised if they've gone down. The price comparison is not totally fair for a U. S. purchaser since shipping from Krale is over $30. But even if you put half the shipping on the scope price it's 200 versus 230 versus 330.

For a short and light scope at a reasonable price I think a SFP Vector Veyron is a great choice.