I don't need a Majesta with my Comp and 10-60 High Master doing
just fine but, let me throw this out there for debating sake......Would
not a Majesta in it's higher power range and "wider field of view" be
a detriment In heavy mirage ?? Key phrase here is "wider field of view"
Like normal, we all drop back in power to help clear things up. With the
Majesta, you drop back in power. but still have a wider field of view
gathering light......Pondering, and thinking out loud again......
Nothing wrong with thinking out loud. I shall answer in the same way. The NF Comp is a great riflescope, there are no flies on it and it has a vast following and many records have bene set with it.
The March-X 10-60X56 HM (the High Master) is a fine riflescope. I have used one for several years and it did great for me. If I only I had lived up to its capabilities... It has long been my observation and belief that the Super ED glass in the 10-60X56 does a great job at tempering the IQ degradation engendered by the phenomenon known colloquially as "mirage". The image of the target may be yucky (a technical term) at 50X but I was able to stay at 50X across all conditions and in every venue in which I competed. While others would dial down because of mirage, I would stay at 50X and still be able to discern the rings and have a round aiming black on which to hold and shoot.
The Majesta is in a class of its own. It has the glass of the 10-60X56 plus an extra sprinkle of pixie dust to help deal with the mirage. It also has a 25° angle of view compared to 20° for the 10-60X56 HM and 19° for the NF Comp (IIRC). This 25% linear increase in FOV turns into a view that is 156% that of the 10-60X56 at the same magnification, since we shoot in two dimensions. This 56% increase in FOV provides a view of the surroundings of the target and will show you more of the conditions on the way to the target, and at the target. The Super ED glass will also pick up the faintest shimmer of mirage and thus alert you to the direction and amplitude of any conditions that may affect the bullet in its trajectory. Essentially it expands the event horizon in your view. I compare it to shooting in IMAX. You will have a larger image to look at compared to the 10-60X56 and at the same magnification.
Some Majesta users run it at 60X taking advantage of the very wide FOV and eschewing the use of a spotting scope, others, like myself, run it at 80X all the time, taking advantage of the higher magnification which translates to a bigger picture of the target and allows me more precision to place the dot of the MTR-WFD reticle surgically on the target at the ring that I want.
It's all in how you want to use it, but do not expect a picture-perfect view of the target at 80X in bad mirage, but you will get a yucky picture of the target with a round aiming black, and rings, that do not move around.
Read the piece at the Marchscopes.com website on best practices using the Majesta.