• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

The Very Best Scope For Your Money

This week I made the decision to purchase a new scope foe my Ruger No.1 in 7x57, and once again was faced with the never ending question, what is the best scope for my money? Over the years I've purchased everything from Vortexes to Schmidt & Bender scopes. What I've noticed is as I get older, the quality of glass becomes more and more important.

I've never understood spending $800-$1,200 on a rifle only to top it off with an entry level scope. The light gathering quality of the more expensive brands can be critical during the last five minutes of the day, it can mean the difference between properly identifying a trophy buck or seeing just a dark object. Some people believe that a $250 Weaver is all you need while others believe that you should spend as much for a scope, if not more, as you do a rifle.

What makes sense, is a $2,000 Night Force scope a remarkable tool that provides the absolute best in vision and clarity or is it a rich man's toy? Is a Weaver all the scope anyone really needs? How much is enough?
 
More expensive, better glass, ive shot more deer last 5 min of light than I have during day light. Im all for a better scope.

Lower end scopes... well my older uncles, have a fit every year because their scopes wont hold a zero, and they gotta go do the pre deer season sight in every year without fail.. buy once, wince/cry once, and get it over with, imo..
 
The Ruger #1 is a pretty lean machine. I would look at a high end scope that runs on the lighter in weight end of the spectrum with maybe with a 44mm objective so the gun doesn't feel like it wants to flop to one side or the other from a heavy scope in high rings. I like my Kahles 624 but it sits on a 300wsm in a sniper fill McM. stock.....Not a very lean machine....;)...........Best of luck.

Best Regards
Rick
 
That front lens size...the 50mm min. no matter the power settings you chose..The smaller 40 42 44 mm sizes ...I struggle with in low light conditions..Be it Burris or Leupold...My Leupold V3 3 x 10 is nice but it is not the end all in hunting scopes..When I was younger I had a top of the line Lyman 3x9 a big front lens ..I should have never sold it with that Ruger m77 257Roberts..Go with the largest front lens you can find in power features you chose..I wear glasses & I'm getting older..I hate to struggle seeing the target...Mike in Ct
 
6 Power is not enough, that's exactly why I'm changing scopes is because I've got a 6 power scope.


I guess I've shot deer well over 600 yards with a fixed 6 x 42 power scope with out any problem. Now the only reason you need a high powered scope is to look for small horns. I can see into the woods better at prime time with the 6 power where you can't with the higher power variables. More lenses the less light, impact shift with a variable as you turn it up and eye relief change also........ Jim
 
This week I made the decision to purchase a new scope foe my Ruger No.1 in 7x57, and once again was faced with the never ending question, what is the best scope for my money? Over the years I've purchased everything from Vortexes to Schmidt & Bender scopes. What I've noticed is as I get older, the quality of glass becomes more and more important.

I've never understood spending $800-$1,200 on a rifle only to top it off with an entry level scope. The light gathering quality of the more expensive brands can be critical during the last five minutes of the day, it can mean the difference between properly identifying a trophy buck or seeing just a dark object. Some people believe that a $250 Weaver is all you need while others believe that you should spend as much for a scope, if not more, as you do a rifle.

What makes sense, is a $2,000 Night Force scope a remarkable tool that provides the absolute best in vision and clarity or is it a rich man's toy? Is a Weaver all the scope anyone really needs? How much is enough?
Look at the new Leica line of scopes, you won't be disappointed. As to the Weavers, their high end stuff is very nice with good glass but they certainly aren't $250 scopes. There are a lot of really good scopes but a overly huge scope on a hunting rifle in my opinion is just in the way. I use 30mm tubes but I stick to stuff that is around 1#-1 1/4# in weight. As I said, look at the new Leicas, amazing glass.
 
Look at the new Leica line of scopes, you won't be disappointed. As to the Weavers, their high end stuff is very nice with good glass but they certainly aren't $250 scopes. There are a lot of really good scopes but a overly huge scope on a hunting rifle in my opinion is just in the way. I use 30mm tubes but I stick to stuff that is around 1#-1 1/4# in weight. As I said, look at the new Leicas, amazing glass.
Just to give you an idea, one of my hunting buds took a Zeiss Daivari off his main rifle and replaced it with the Leica. The Leica costs about 1/2 of the Zeiss.
 
Personally for the rifle in question I would purchase a Swarovski Z6 2.5x15x56. Excellent glass and low light capabilities. Fairly light weight.
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
165,832
Messages
2,203,939
Members
79,144
Latest member
BCB1
Back
Top