Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
You are using the old High Contrast theme. We have installed a new dark theme for you, called UI.X. This will work better with the new upgrade of our software. You can select it at the bottom of any page.
I would start with a low magnification (2-7x or even a fixed 4x) scope with a heavy reticle, then spend every bit of the money I could on higher quality glasses and coatings.
A larger objective won't necessarily help you, especially if the lenses and coatings are poor quality.
The most important consideration is lense quality. Good glass trumps large size every time. The size of the objective along with magnification determine the diameter of the light beam leaving the back of the scope. Lense quality determines how bright that beam of light is.
If you divide the scopes objecitve size by its magnification you get the exit pupil rating. This is the diameter of the light beam as it hits your eye. For low light you need an exit pupil rating of 5-6mm. Most peoples eyes cannot use any more. An exit pupil rating of 6 or more is wasted. A scope with a large objective will allow you to use it on higher magnifications, but unless you really need 10X or 11X you gain nothing over a 40mm scope set on 8X. If you never need more than 4X, then a 20mm scope will be just as bright as a 50mm lense set on 10X. Assuming equal quality glass.
As long as you stick with the better Leupolds, Nikon's, Burris, Zeiss, etc, the difference is actually quite small. In my experience Zeiss is slightly better than the others I've tried, but any of them work well enough for me to shoot until several minutes after legal shooting time has passed anyway. The fact that the Zeiss lets me see for 5 minutes longer into the evening isn't of any practical advantage.
If you have a choice between a Zeiss and a Barska, pick the Zeiss.
If you're choosing between two similar scopes, with different sized objective lenses, in low light when your pupil is dilated, you want the bigger objective.
Adjust the magnification so the exit pupil of the scope is about the same size as the entrance pupil of your eye. The bigger objective will get more (brighter, more densely focused) light to your eye.
You want good glass, and you want a good ratio of power to objective size for the max exit pupil the eye can take advantage of. The more power, the larger the objective you need. This is one reason many people like low power for hunting scopes. I have a 2.5X8X36 Leupold Vari X III on my .308 and a 2X7X32 Vortex Viper on my .35 Remington.
"If you divide the scopes objecitve size by its magnification you get the exit pupil rating."
A lot of the newer super zooms do not hold to this rule and have smaller exit pupils than typical 3X zoom scopes.
IMHO after you cross an imaginary line somewhere around $400 and until you cross another north of $1000, the reticle will be the major factor in making a low light shot.
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.