Ledd Slinger
Silver $$ Contributor
I have been awaiting the release of these new riflescope by Crimson Trace since I heard about them a year ago. Well they finally hit the market and I took my chance at reviewing one of them. Crimson Trace hit the market strong with plenty of offerings so they didnt really leave any magnification ranges to be desired unless you are a long range benchrest shooter. All scope reticles are in FFP. Series 2 are the most affordable and Series 5 the most expensive with Series 3 in the middle. All Crimson Trace scooes are made in Japan with Japanese ED glass and carry a lifetime unconditional warranty.
The "Series 2" scope offerings: ALL FFP Reticles
4-16x50 with 30mm tube
6-24x56 with 34mm tube
The "Series 3" scope offerings: ALL FFP Reticles
1-8x28 with 34mm tube
4-20x50 with 30mm tube
5-25x56 with 34mm tube
The "Series 5" scope offerings: ALL FFP Reticles
1-8x28 with 34mm tube
3-18x50 with 34mm tube
3-24x56 with 34mm tube
I chose the Series 2, 6-24x56 riflescope for my review. It was one of the most affordable offerings and it has a TON of features for its meager $600 street price that I paid for it at MidwayUSA. It come housed in a nice sturdy box with custom cut foam. Included 'Bultler Creek' style caps are already installed. Although the caps are similar to Bultler Creek caps, they are definitely a little bit nicer as they lock up and stay closed much better than Butler caps.

It's a beast of a scope with the big 34mm tube housing and 56mm objective. Overall length is 15-1/4" with the caps installed and it tipped the weight scale at 36.2 oz (35.2 oz without the caps).
The reticle has nice fine posts that help to keep the FOV as clear as can be on a FFP scope and the floating center dot, although a little large, is nice for aiming precisely without reticle disturbance in the immediate vicinity of center target. Being FFP, the reticle dies take up some FOV at 24x with the numbers beside the posts, but it's not that bad due to the fine reticle design. Definitely didnt bother me as bad as some if the other horribly cluttered FFP reticles I've seen in some scopes. The reticle illumination works very well with no bleeding on any power level in any lighting. Very good job there.
I found a way to take good illuminated reticle pics in the dark. See all reticle photos below.
Reticle on fence post at 47 yards and 12x.

Illuminated reticle at 6x on max illumination in the dark.

Illuminated reticle at 16x on max illumination in the dark.

Illuminated reticle at 24x on max illumination in the dark. Notice how I'm missing 10 MOA of the 40 MOA total on the posts.

To be continued in posts below due to max allowed photos in a single post....
The "Series 2" scope offerings: ALL FFP Reticles
4-16x50 with 30mm tube
6-24x56 with 34mm tube
The "Series 3" scope offerings: ALL FFP Reticles
1-8x28 with 34mm tube
4-20x50 with 30mm tube
5-25x56 with 34mm tube
The "Series 5" scope offerings: ALL FFP Reticles
1-8x28 with 34mm tube
3-18x50 with 34mm tube
3-24x56 with 34mm tube
I chose the Series 2, 6-24x56 riflescope for my review. It was one of the most affordable offerings and it has a TON of features for its meager $600 street price that I paid for it at MidwayUSA. It come housed in a nice sturdy box with custom cut foam. Included 'Bultler Creek' style caps are already installed. Although the caps are similar to Bultler Creek caps, they are definitely a little bit nicer as they lock up and stay closed much better than Butler caps.

It's a beast of a scope with the big 34mm tube housing and 56mm objective. Overall length is 15-1/4" with the caps installed and it tipped the weight scale at 36.2 oz (35.2 oz without the caps).
The reticle has nice fine posts that help to keep the FOV as clear as can be on a FFP scope and the floating center dot, although a little large, is nice for aiming precisely without reticle disturbance in the immediate vicinity of center target. Being FFP, the reticle dies take up some FOV at 24x with the numbers beside the posts, but it's not that bad due to the fine reticle design. Definitely didnt bother me as bad as some if the other horribly cluttered FFP reticles I've seen in some scopes. The reticle illumination works very well with no bleeding on any power level in any lighting. Very good job there.
I found a way to take good illuminated reticle pics in the dark. See all reticle photos below.
Reticle on fence post at 47 yards and 12x.

Illuminated reticle at 6x on max illumination in the dark.

Illuminated reticle at 16x on max illumination in the dark.

Illuminated reticle at 24x on max illumination in the dark. Notice how I'm missing 10 MOA of the 40 MOA total on the posts.

To be continued in posts below due to max allowed photos in a single post....
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