I wonder if anyone here has done resolution comparisons/tests with the higher power March scopes?
By this, I mean on resolution test targets, or game at distance, rather than 1moa bullseyes.
My thinking(which is weak on optics), is that there is only a certain amount of information brought to the reticle plane for a given size scope(tube length/lens size & quality), and that merely zooming in on this information more & more(like to 80x) would just reduce resolution. With this, I would expect an 80x scope, if equal in resolution to a 25x scope, to be way bigger than that 25x scope.
Along this line, I have read a shooter report that his 50x March had way lower resolution at 800yds than his 25x Leupold Mk4, and he did not consider March suitable for hunting varmints because of this. He couldn't tell a rabbit from a rock (or something along that line) with a March.
I tried the add on booster lens out there for my NF scopes, and found that it reduced resolution to the point of useless for anything but paper targets of simple bullseye. It did not actually provide any benefit whatsoever.
This told me that magnification -without appropriate resolution, provides no actual gain to the end user in the field.
By this, I mean on resolution test targets, or game at distance, rather than 1moa bullseyes.
My thinking(which is weak on optics), is that there is only a certain amount of information brought to the reticle plane for a given size scope(tube length/lens size & quality), and that merely zooming in on this information more & more(like to 80x) would just reduce resolution. With this, I would expect an 80x scope, if equal in resolution to a 25x scope, to be way bigger than that 25x scope.
Along this line, I have read a shooter report that his 50x March had way lower resolution at 800yds than his 25x Leupold Mk4, and he did not consider March suitable for hunting varmints because of this. He couldn't tell a rabbit from a rock (or something along that line) with a March.
I tried the add on booster lens out there for my NF scopes, and found that it reduced resolution to the point of useless for anything but paper targets of simple bullseye. It did not actually provide any benefit whatsoever.
This told me that magnification -without appropriate resolution, provides no actual gain to the end user in the field.