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Next step up over SIII 10-50

I’m always leery when people use superlatives when describing their products comparing them to others. In the optics world, comparing one scope to another or to several others is not something that should be done at the drop of a hat or with impressions from one person over a span of time; comparing riflescopes is extremely difficult and requires scientific rigor and instruments. And knowledge.


To be honest, I totally discount anyone’s “impressions” and comparisons. Let me explain why, then I’ll dive into hogan’s posting on this thread.


When you want to compare scopes, you MUST start with equivalent scopes with equivalent capabilities and most important equivalent setup. Then you need to know what you’re looking for and come up with a repeatable way to measure what you are considering. That’s where scientific rigor and instruments come in and the knowledge to use them and even to know what to look for and how to measure it.


For example, it is totally ludicrous to compare a 10X40 to 5-25X56 or any other combination of riflescopes that do not have the same specifications. If you MUST compare the 10X40 to the 5-25X56, you must set the variable to 10X. Even then, the objective lens of the variable is much larger than the fixed power so the exit pupil will be much bigger and easier to see. Also, there is a lot more light coming in so the image will be brighter, as well as easier to see.

Comparing an FFP 4.5-29X56 (the Cronus) to a March-X (I’ll refer to mine because I know it so well,) SFP 5-50X56 requires that we compare them when both when they are set at the same magnification; in other words between 5 and 29X. We can go no higher, but we can certainly note that one goes lower (Cronus to 4.5X) and the other goes much higher (March-X to 50X).


Also, it is vital, critical even, that we do a side by side comparison on the same day, looking at the same target on the same mount, be it a rifle or a tripod. The setup has to be the same, looking at the same target at the same time. And then we need to use the instruments to measure the different parameters.


This is when you deploy targets that have black and white lines and various other geometric shapes as well as numbers. You use these things to measure resolution, contrast and other qualities instead of looking at runway lights at some distance, with one scope. If you want to measure light transmission, you use an instrument for that and you get real values, not an impression. The human eye cannot really distinguish light transmission between similar scopes.


The OP of this thread is a question about someone doing LR benchrest at 500 and 1000 yards. He currently has a 10-50X60 Sightron. Our friend hogan, comes in and starts touting the extraordinary capabilities of a 4.5-29X56 scope. A first focal plane scope. As an upgrade to a 10-50X60 scope, for LR benchrest.


Our friend hogan proposes an upgrade that has half the magnification and a smaller objective and with a reticle that will vary in size. I would think that the OP is considering getting MORE magnification, not surrendering more than half of it right off the bat. I also suspect he’s wondering if he should look at better glass than he currently has. Well, getting a smaller objective is going in the wrong direction, even if the glass in the Cronus is better than the one in the Sightron.


I went to the website that hogan posted and looked at the specs of the Cronus. As I’ve explained many times before, the big differentiator in glass is the use of ED elements in a riflescope. ED glass was invented by Nikkor in the 1970s to bypass the issues that come with using fluorite glass to correct chromatic aberration. Canon has its own similar glass as now do a few others. The Athlon website says they use HD glass and that it “gives you the utmost contrast, light transmission, and the sharpest image.” It’s not ED glass; I have no clue what it is but the description does not match ED glass qualities. Also, ED glass is expensive, though not quite as expensive as fluorite, and is only required for a few elements in a scope. It will not affect light transmission, that’s done with lens coatings. We do not know who makes the glass for the Cronus, but I do not believe it is ED glass.


The remainder of the features touted by Athlon on their website is geared at comparing their expensive high end offering to cheap optics. For example, they say their fully multicoated lenses give you a brighter image that normal single coated lens. Well, duh, my SUV goes faster than a bicycle. Their one-piece tube is better than multi-piece tubes; it’s as if they invented the concept and nobody else does that. Same with argon purging and many other things.


I also see in their specs, that the Cronus is porky at 35.8 ounces. My March-X 5-50X56 with ED glass is at 32.6 ounces. I use the weight difference in my barrel and benefit from 80% increase in magnification, ED glass and closer focus as the minimum focus distance for the Cronus 4.5-29X56 is 25 yards. My March-X above has a 10 yard minimum focus distance.

Now, it’s very possible that the Athlon Cronus is all that and a bag of chips, but I will wait for actual user reports from F-class and LR benchrest shooters before I form a final opinion.

And as for seeing bullet holes at 1000 yards with a 29X scope not even set at its maximum magnification, the less said, the better.

Not to the OP, I would say that your next step up is ED glass and staying near 50-60X.
 
The NF Br is the most common and probably holds the most records. Its a proven scope. If you can handle the weight it would be my first choice. If you need a light scope the March 10-60.
The NF BR is a step down with smaller magnification and smaller objective, no ED glass and it's as porky as the Cronus at 36 ounces.
 
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The NF BR is a step don with smaller magnification and smaller objective, no ED glass and it's as porky as the Cronus at 36 ounces.
Deny, Alex is right about the BR breaking records in 1000 yard BR. More group, score and aggregate records are probably held by it. The Objective is 56MM and the glass is not the ED like the comp but they are rock solid and hold POA. It probably holds many records in the 50 cal. Disipline also. You don't need to see great to shoot records in BR. You only need to see the black crosshair in the middle of a 4 inch patch. I rarely use over 32 power on account of heat and mirage. As far as seeing bullet holes at a 1000 yards. It is almost impossible and only ever know of two guys that did it and said where they were. Conditions, including sun angle has to be right.
Dave Tooley shot beside me at IBS Nationals in Ohio in 2008. He told me where most my shots were while we were waiting for the rest to get done. He was right when I got my target back. That was with an 12x42 BR in heavy gun. It doesn't happen often, even with the best spotting scopes with 80 plus MM objectives. Matt
 
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There is absolutely nothing wrong with the BR; it's a great scope and very popular. I am talking about the next step up from where the OP is currently.
 
I recently purchased a used NF 12-42x56 BR scope for a specific rifle where I didn't want to put a whole lot of money into the scope. It is just right for my intended purpose. However, after years of using NF 8-32x56 and 12-42x56 NXS, and more recently, NF Competition scopes in F-TR, I find the front parallax adjustment on the BR scope to be a complete gong show. Fortunately, it's fine for my intended purpose on that specific rifle; however, now that I've had a chance to work with it, I would never attempt to put a front parallax adjustment (BR) scope on an F-TR rifle. YMMV, but it would absolutely drive me insane in a match. Side parallax is light years better, IMO.

As Denys pointed out, the BR is a good scope, but there better options currently available. The Vortex GE, NF Competition, Sightron SV, and March scopes would all be an improvement over what you have; amongst them, the thickness of your wallet would, by necessity, be the deciding factor.
 
That's interesting. When I was shooting with the Weaver T-36, adjusting the AO (Adjustable Objective), was not too much of an issue. It was easy to adjust and you could go directly from one yard line to the other with no problem. Once it was set for that yard line, I did not have to fiddle with it again. The AO is actually better in many ways to a Side Focus. And it is one less lens in the scope. On the other hand, I can see where a side focus is better if you're changing distances and have to adjust from position. And if you're an old fart like me.
 
I’m always leery when people use superlatives when describing their products comparing them to others. In the optics world, comparing one scope to another or to several others is not something that should be done at the drop of a hat or with impressions from one person over a span of time; comparing riflescopes is extremely difficult and requires scientific rigor and instruments. And knowledge.


To be honest, I totally discount anyone’s “impressions” and comparisons. Let me explain why, then I’ll dive into hogan’s posting on this thread.


When you want to compare scopes, you MUST start with equivalent scopes with equivalent capabilities and most important equivalent setup. Then you need to know what you’re looking for and come up with a repeatable way to measure what you are considering. That’s where scientific rigor and instruments come in and the knowledge to use them and even to know what to look for and how to measure it.


For example, it is totally ludicrous to compare a 10X40 to 5-25X56 or any other combination of riflescopes that do not have the same specifications. If you MUST compare the 10X40 to the 5-25X56, you must set the variable to 10X. Even then, the objective lens of the variable is much larger than the fixed power so the exit pupil will be much bigger and easier to see. Also, there is a lot more light coming in so the image will be brighter, as well as easier to see.

Comparing an FFP 4.5-29X56 (the Cronus) to a March-X (I’ll refer to mine because I know it so well,) SFP 5-50X56 requires that we compare them when both when they are set at the same magnification; in other words between 5 and 29X. We can go no higher, but we can certainly note that one goes lower (Cronus to 4.5X) and the other goes much higher (March-X to 50X).


Also, it is vital, critical even, that we do a side by side comparison on the same day, looking at the same target on the same mount, be it a rifle or a tripod. The setup has to be the same, looking at the same target at the same time. And then we need to use the instruments to measure the different parameters.


This is when you deploy targets that have black and white lines and various other geometric shapes as well as numbers. You use these things to measure resolution, contrast and other qualities instead of looking at runway lights at some distance, with one scope. If you want to measure light transmission, you use an instrument for that and you get real values, not an impression. The human eye cannot really distinguish light transmission between similar scopes.


The OP of this thread is a question about someone doing LR benchrest at 500 and 1000 yards. He currently has a 10-50X60 Sightron. Our friend hogan, comes in and starts touting the extraordinary capabilities of a 4.5-29X56 scope. A first focal plane scope. As an upgrade to a 10-50X60 scope, for LR benchrest.


Our friend hogan proposes an upgrade that has half the magnification and a smaller objective and with a reticle that will vary in size. I would think that the OP is considering getting MORE magnification, not surrendering more than half of it right off the bat. I also suspect he’s wondering if he should look at better glass than he currently has. Well, getting a smaller objective is going in the wrong direction, even if the glass in the Cronus is better than the one in the Sightron.


I went to the website that hogan posted and looked at the specs of the Cronus. As I’ve explained many times before, the big differentiator in glass is the use of ED elements in a riflescope. ED glass was invented by Nikkor in the 1970s to bypass the issues that come with using fluorite glass to correct chromatic aberration. Canon has its own similar glass as now do a few others. The Athlon website says they use HD glass and that it “gives you the utmost contrast, light transmission, and the sharpest image.” It’s not ED glass; I have no clue what it is but the description does not match ED glass qualities. Also, ED glass is expensive, though not quite as expensive as fluorite, and is only required for a few elements in a scope. It will not affect light transmission, that’s done with lens coatings. We do not know who makes the glass for the Cronus, but I do not believe it is ED glass.


The remainder of the features touted by Athlon on their website is geared at comparing their expensive high end offering to cheap optics. For example, they say their fully multicoated lenses give you a brighter image that normal single coated lens. Well, duh, my SUV goes faster than a bicycle. Their one-piece tube is better than multi-piece tubes; it’s as if they invented the concept and nobody else does that. Same with argon purging and many other things.


I also see in their specs, that the Cronus is porky at 35.8 ounces. My March-X 5-50X56 with ED glass is at 32.6 ounces. I use the weight difference in my barrel and benefit from 80% increase in magnification, ED glass and closer focus as the minimum focus distance for the Cronus 4.5-29X56 is 25 yards. My March-X above has a 10 yard minimum focus distance.

Now, it’s very possible that the Athlon Cronus is all that and a bag of chips, but I will wait for actual user reports from F-class and LR benchrest shooters before I form a final opinion.

And as for seeing bullet holes at 1000 yards with a 29X scope not even set at its maximum magnification, the less said, the better.

Not to the OP, I would say that your next step up is ED glass and staying near 50-60X.
The only thing that needs to deciphered about Hogan's post's is he's got a new dealership with Athlon and is pushing a product to a discipline that he obviously has no clue about and ZERO understanding of it's needs. And he has the best thing since sliced bread but hasn't even used it yet...
 
I've been shooting Ftr a couple of years with an 8-32 SIII. Deciding higher mag would improve sighting capability, esp minor resolution around the x-ring on a calm day, I settled on the Vortex GE. While the SIII is pretty clear the GE is obviously much better at seeing through mirage at higher mags, which will be a major improvement.
 
Unless you are a birdwatcher or a professional photographer, ED glass in an unnecessary expense.
I disagree.

In photography, you can easily deal with chromatic aberration in post processing. But when it comes to dealing with riflescope, what ED glass does for me is make the rings on the target more distinct, less fuzzy if you will and makes placement the aiming dot more precise. It could all be in my head, of course, but it works for me; the contrast is just better.

I also believe that ED glass attenuates the effect of mirage on the sight picture. My March-X is nowhere near affected by mirage compared to my non-ED glass NXS. But again, that could be just me. My Kowa spotting scope, non-ED shows the mirage a lot more than my riflescope. And again, just for me, I believe that ED is worth it, just for that. But, as I said, that's just me.
 
I disagree.

In photography, you can easily deal with chromatic aberration in post processing. But when it comes to dealing with riflescope, what ED glass does for me is make the rings on the target more distinct, less fuzzy if you will and makes placement the aiming dot more precise. It could all be in my head, of course, but it works for me; the contrast is just better.

I also believe that ED glass attenuates the effect of mirage on the sight picture. My March-X is nowhere near affected by mirage compared to my non-ED glass NXS. But again, that could be just me. My Kowa spotting scope, non-ED shows the mirage a lot more than my riflescope. And again, just for me, I believe that ED is worth it, just for that. But, as I said, that's just me.
Many manufacturers claim to use ED/HD glass. Ignore the claims from the cheaper makers. Nikon themselves placed that moniker on their cheaper lenses after the "ED" became popular. The original ED glass is made by Hikari Glass. Hikari happens to be a Nikon owned company. Can anyone say with certainty that Nikon is producing scope lenses? You'll find the higher end Nikon scopes are made by LOW (Light Optical Works). The low bidder usually wins the contract, as long as they can produce the quality and quantity of glass required.

Edit: You can rest assured, March scopes will contain the best glass made;)
 
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Sightron has some newer ED glass in the updated 34mm 10-50x's.. Price where someone would shop around though.. I'm thinking the Vortex Golden Eagle is the next value scope with ED glass @ 60x.. That is why I am ordering one..

Ray

Can you post a link that confirms the statement that Sightron has new ED glass? I don't see it on their website.
 
Nikon started developing ED glass in 1971, I believe. Their Hikari division started in 1975 and became part of the Nikon Group in 2004. Hikari (and Nikkor itself before that) makes the glass, Nikkor makes the camera lenses, Nikon makes the cameras. All part of the Nikon Group. There are only a few companies around the world who make optical glass. Hikari sells optical glass to German companies, BTW, they sell around the world.

I do not know who really makes Nikon scopes but I would think they use Nikon (Hikari) glass.
 
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Nikon started developing ED glass in 1971, I believe. Their Hikari division started in 1975. Hikari makes the glass, Nikkor makes the camera lenses, Nikon makes the cameras. All part of the Nikon Group. There are only a few companies around the world who make optical glass. Hikari sells optical glass to German companies, BTW, they sell around the world.

I do not know who really makes Nikon scopes but I would think they use Nikon (Hikari) glass.
A bit more history: Nikon developed the ED glass in the late 1960's. In 1976, they came up with the IF (internal focusing). If I am not mistaken, Canon played a part in the development of the ED glass, along with their own versions of modern glass and coatings. Only Nikon's high end camera lenses are actually made by Nikon. The others are sourced out. Scope glass…. who knows!
 
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Ok. Nikon site says 1971, but I'm sure they were thinking about before. Nikon and Canon have always played off each other and I think that's helped both, and the consumer.


This year is the 100 anniversary of Nikon so they have lots of historical information and their website.
http://www.nikon.com/100th/

I like Nikon cameras and have had them for decades. There's even a song about that. Simon and Garfunkel some time in the 1970s. I shot a lot of Kodachrome and Panatomic-F. Now it's all digital.
 
Most of us hunt with Kowa Highlanders. One guy thought he needed the Flouite lenses in his. So he spent the extra 3000 dollars. In hunting season we compared the good one against the regular one. Nobody could tell any difference. That was over 3 weeks of hunting and spotting game from 1200 to 1900 yards. It was on sunny days, foggy days, rainy days and with and without snow. The only time anybody saw a difference was the blood trail in the snow was way brighter red. They both are 82 MM objectives and the same power(32X). It is also some of the best glass there is. We sit at the same spot all day and glass for deer and bear. Matt
 

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