Title pretty much says it all.
I've never owned or used a scope over a few hundred bucks. I've bought a few of the cheapo CVlife FFPs on amazon recently with no obvious problems. What's the deal?
Edit: not really talking about nightvision scopes... for that the price makes a bit more sense.
I’ve worked my way slowly up the scope cost ladder over the years. In the last year I bought a March 48x and a Schmidt and Bender 12-50x56 FT II, my most expensive optics. And I own several at all ranges in between.
Here are some of the big things that money buys:
- highest quality glass and machined parts. Every copy of a lens model is a good copy. Midrange and budget scopes often have varying final quality and some copies are just much better than others. I think back to some Bushnell 4.5-30x and 6-24x tactical that a buddy and I both bought during a closeout sale. No question my 6-24 was tack sharp and my 4.5-30 was soft most of the time. His 4.5-30 was tack sharp.
- Zoom range. Big zoom ranges cost more and big zoom range with good optical performance costs a whole lot more. Fixed magnification scopes give you a lot more optical range performance for less weight and cost if you can settle on one magnification level.
- Usable maximum magnification. If you want to show the quality of an optic, wind it up to maximum magnification and point it at a very high contrast target. A black on white target backer, leaves on a blue sky, a flagpole. Cheap scopes always show their optical issues clearly at full magnification.
- Warranty. A good warranty is paid for up-front.
- Optical design. Glass that gives a wide range of parallax free focus, diopters of ocular adjustment, minimal purple fringing, minimal vignetting, maximum eyebox, etc. Also the performance of the scope in poor lighting conditions. If you're competing you don’t get to pass up or wait out a shot due to conditions.
- Heavy duty “tactical” construction. Big tube diameters with massive elevation range. This should make enough sense.
- Adjustment knobs that work reliably and make equal consistent movements with each click.
- light weight. It’s cheaper to build a chunkier scope to achieve a set of specs than it is to make it light.
- Large lenses gather more light and provide a bigger field of view but they do cost a lot.
- “ED” glass with fluorite material is superior to glass lenses and it’s not cheap. Especially big lenses.
So yeah we want it all.
My personal philosophy has shifted in recent years away from having a large collection of shooting toys toward having ten I really shoot regularly and outfitting each one with really good scopes. I’ve started by upgrading the scopes on my competition guns first. I may or may not get to my less serious guns since none of them already have cheap scopes on them. And in competition the size of the glass is not a big issue, even if it looks outlandish.