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You're going to have to decide what kind of long range shooting you'll be doing, then make a list of priorities for what you want from a scope.
Until then, you're only going to get overly biased opinions and off the wall comments.
recreational target shooting. progressing to some competitions.Please define your mission
What kind of competition you might be interested in greatly influences what the you need. Any ideas?recreational target shooting. progressing to some competitions.
...and leave more money for ammo. Practice is more important than any of the above.6 of one.... 1/2 dozen of the other....
Nightforce cost more, has nicer glass and is lighter
Vortex is cheaper, super durable and heavy, Vortex has the best warranty ever
Either will work just fine. Pick the one in your budget
No kidding, I'm with you, buy one you think may work, upgrade later. Most likely you'll upgrade rifles at the same time, now you have backups in both rifle and optic.This ^
But if you are like a lot of people, whatever you buy won’t be the one you ultimately use no matter how good of a scope it is until you really narrow down your need which probably won’t occur until after actually buy the first scope. Just buy something that you think fits the bill, shoot a bunch and then decide your needs. Then you can really buy the scope you want/need. Just my opinion.
FClass, Palma,Benchrest,PRS,ELR,....? Need to be more precise.recreational target shooting. progressing to some competitions.
From what I’ve seen and if I’m not mistaken, not really. Most F-class will be upwards of 50-60 power where ELR rigs I see tend to be around half of that. While both are long range disciplines and it would seem logical to use a similar scope it doesn’t work that way in reality.f class and elr. is one scope better at doing both?
f class and elr. is one scope better at doing both?
