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Need a scope for night hunting in Europe |
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dr_deerhunter
Optics GrassHopper Joined: April/27/2011 Status: Offline Points: 14 |
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Posted: April/27/2011 at 18:27 |
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When I took the German hunting course, I never thought I would be
hunting at night, but as it turns out, hunting opportunities are rather
limited if you aren't willing to sit out in the dark.
I have a Savage 7mm Mag entry level rifle that I want to use for hunting hogs at night. Night vision scopes and spotlighting are not allowed in Germany, so it has to be something that picks up a lot of ambient light, and I would like to get an illuminated reticle if possible, or at least know I can see the aimpoint at night. Most hunters in Germany are rich and own a bunch of land and don't think anything about plopping down 1500 Euro on a scope, so their advice is all Zeiss or Sworski or nothing, which isn't very helpful. I'm not rich; I own a bunch of kids instead of a bunch of land; and I'd like to have enough money to buy some decent binoculars, and still be able to buy groceries after its all done. One of my hunting instructors recommended the Guide Gear 3-12x56 from sportsmans guide. I'm thinking that might be a little too far on the cheap side. I'm not sure who makes it - maybe Barska? Another hunter suggested I look at used glass on samplelist.com. I found some - what appear to be - mid-range scopes, but I don't have any experience with them. There is a Nikko Sterling Nighteater 10-50x60for $300 (which appears to be popular with airgunners - don't know if it can stand up to a centerfire rifle). Also there is a Nikon 3-9x50 for around $200, but no illumination. Burris also seems to be about in the price range I'm looking for. I've also noticed Millet and Meuller tend to have some large 50-56mm objective glass in that price range Since all I seem to be able to find are discussions on high-end products, has anyone had experience with any of these mid-range scopes at night? Any other possible recommendations without breakin' the bank? I haven't seen a lot of comparisons between the mid-range scopes, especially comparing light transmission in near total darkness (moonlight and starlight as only sources). I would appreciate anyone's expertise to help me make a decision. Thanks, Gary |
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Gerry Atric
Optics Journeyman Joined: April/21/2011 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 340 |
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Any old fixed 8x56 german/austrian scope with either reticle no. 4 or no. 1 would do the trick.
I believe as we have the same "culture" in Sweden as in Germany hunting at night, the "tools" would be the same.
I suggest you search for a used, fixed (or variable) scope manufactured by Zeiss, Swarovski, Schmidt & Bender, Kahles Helia, or one notch down: Pecar, Nickel.....it doesn´t matter if it´s 20-30 years old, it will beat any of the scopes you´ve mentioned.
Beware of scopes with fancy german names such as Luger, Welter, Jaeger "und so weiter" they are at best made in Japan but more likely China.
Don´t sacrifice good optics on the altar of illumination, (I´m rather pleased with that phrase) If you can´t locate the front end of the animal, what should you aim at with your illuminated reticle ?
Gerry Atric
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tejas
Optics Journeyman Joined: March/08/2010 Location: Lone Star State Status: Offline Points: 575 |
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These are the scopes I use for hog hunting.
My best: http://swfa.com:80/Trijicon-25-10x56-Accu-Point-30mm-Rifle-Scope-P12880.aspx This one works too: http://swfa.com:80/Vortex-1-4x24-Viper-PST-30mm-Rifle-Scope-P44570.aspx I don't know if you can get them in Germany or afford them. If you can't get something with good glass that's illuminated, then get something with good glass and heavy crosshairs. Thin target type crosshairs are almost impossible to use at night. |
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eurolynn
Optics Apprentice Joined: January/24/2010 Location: Oklahoma Status: Offline Points: 179 |
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From 1993 to 2005, I used the German #1 Post. You get a truer aim and not a guess at the wee hours. trust me, ask your instructors, the German guides to not forgive bad placed shots, dark or not.
Trust me, you can see that post best. I had great results with a simple Burris Fullfield with a simple Micro-Dot at the center of the plex crosshairs. I do not think a #4 is a good choice, you still can not see the actual intersection of the crosshairs at night, it is just a plex with thicker post. I can recall three exact times I coulldn't take a shot on sows, because I coulld not actually make out the center of the reticle. Some will tell you if the boar/sow is between the heavy post to just shoot. DON'T! In the ticket, where the Jungendjagers usually get stuck, the shots can be very close. Remember wounded game goes over to next revere, it is their trophy/meat, but still your problem! The 56mm is not necessary, I learned quality trumps quantity. And the 56mm is the German norm, as is the 30mm tubed scope. You can get a Leupold VX-II 3-9x 40 or 50mm with a #1 post, I used one for a number of years. Had to trade it, couldn't use it no more, I need a fast focus scope now. Check my PM for other info. |
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"Guns aren't toys! They're for family protection, hunting dangerous or delicious animals, and keeping the King of England out of your face!"
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eurolynn
Optics Apprentice Joined: January/24/2010 Location: Oklahoma Status: Offline Points: 179 |
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Gerry
I am not knocking you advice at all! But I just had problems with the # at night4, but I 100% agree with the rest of your advice! Please do not think I was criticizing your choices. |
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"Guns aren't toys! They're for family protection, hunting dangerous or delicious animals, and keeping the King of England out of your face!"
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Gerry Atric
Optics Journeyman Joined: April/21/2011 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 340 |
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It´s OK Eurolynn, We all have different eyes, what suit my eyes (and many others) seems to be No 4 and No 1, (there´s always the possibility not to shoot if you can´t see the animal properly)
8x56, 6x42 and 4x28 is more a physical/optical norm than german
It´s a crying shame that Zeiss discontinued reticle No 1....
Gerry Atric
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Urimaginaryfrnd
MODERATOR Resident Redneck Joined: June/20/2005 Location: Iowa Status: Offline Points: 14964 |
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Look at the Trijicon Accupoint 2.5-10x56 and their other models and consider an ND3 green laser its like a long range flashlight.
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penguin6
Optics Apprentice Joined: October/03/2010 Status: Offline Points: 209 |
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Bushnell Elite 4200 2.5-10x50 is a tough scope with good glass, a good thick reticle, and good illum center dot for night hunting. The center dot is very low intensity at the lowest setting and doesn't wash anything out. If you're willing to spend the money, the Accupoints are preferable. The 2.5-10x56 is great for night hunting, but doesn't offer a whole lot more than the 3-9x40 in my experience. I have no experience with the green laser flashlights, but I've had good experience with some red flashlights. Don't know if the Germans consider that spotlighting, but the red doesn't seem to bother the pigs.
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supertool73
Optics God Superstool Joined: January/03/2008 Status: Offline Points: 11814 |
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I would not consider a Bushnell 4200 that great of a low light scope, especially not a night scope. They have decent glass, but no where near what OP is searching for. Trijicon glass would be the minimum of what he needs IMO.
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dr_deerhunter
Optics GrassHopper Joined: April/27/2011 Status: Offline Points: 14 |
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Thanks for all the discussion. Artificial illumination of any kind is forbidden, so lasers and red lights are out.
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penguin6
Optics Apprentice Joined: October/03/2010 Status: Offline Points: 209 |
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ST73--My experience with the Bushnell is quite different from yours. I've used the 2.5-10x50 for several years of night hunting hogs in Texas, which also seems to include raccoons frequently as well as the occasional coyote and fox. I don't see particularly well at night, but I've never had any difficulty acquiring a good sight picture at 100yds and under, and the illuminated center dot is perfect for night. While I prefer the Trijicons, I don't consider the 4200 glass to be "no where near" the Accupoint.
I've not used the 3-9 Accupoint with just moonlight, so I don't know how well it will do without the aid of any type of red light or feeder light.
I have, however, used the 2.5-10 Accupoint with red triangle under varying degrees of moonlight, and it was great. Since I almost always have a red light on my rifle, the extra bulk seemed unnecessary.
The scopes he listed as considerations seemed to be much less than what the Accupoints cost. For that reason I mentioned the Bushnell, with which I've had good personal experience and which is much less expensive. I don't know offhand other scopes in that price range that would be comparable and reliable, especially in regards to the illum, which always works on the Bushnells I've had, hot or cold weather.
If the Accupoint price is something workable for him, I agree with you that it would preferable. I don't think he'll be shooting hogs at great distance at night without any artificial light, and if he wants to stay with a lower price bracket, I don't think the 4200 would disappoint him if he doesn't dislike the thick reticle. If he will be taking longer shots, e.g., under a good moon in a large field, maybe the Trijicon would serve him better. Additionally, the thick outer posts and relatively thick inner portion of the Bushnell reticle seem busy and distracting to me if the animals are not still. Another reason that would favor the Trijicon.
I'm surprised you saw such a drastic difference between your Accupoint and 4200 at night or in low light. Maybe my vision is getting bad enough that I can't appreciate the disparity.
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coldhunt
Optics Apprentice Joined: March/19/2011 Status: Offline Points: 117 |
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If you don't want to break the bank, have a look at the Trijicon, or the Burris for iluminated, and if you want good glass with no ilumination, and with out the big price tag, take a look at Minox
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Gerry Atric
Optics Journeyman Joined: April/21/2011 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 340 |
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It´s the same rules as in Sweden (but we´re allowed to illuminate the hogs feeding place nowadays).
dr_deerhunter, are you living in Germany or the US ?
Reason for asking; I have been working off and on in the mid-Europe region for 30 years or so, I´ve been in and out of a lot of weapon-stores and seen "a trend": Good used scopes is reasonably prized thanks to the "novelty" of illuminated reticles.
I don´t condone illuminated reticles, good optics and good illumination is better that just good optics
If it comes to money, I´d rather skip the illumination.
Gerry Atric
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1911man
Optics Apprentice Joined: May/17/2009 Location: NW AR Status: Offline Points: 165 |
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After my boar hunt in Turkey where all the shooting was strictly by ambient light I can assure you an illuminated reticle is a necessity. The best night hunting scope I have found is the Trijicon 2.5-10x56 Accupoint with green dot.
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Bill Wilson
www.wilsoncombat.com |
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dr_deerhunter
Optics GrassHopper Joined: April/27/2011 Status: Offline Points: 14 |
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We live in Germany.
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Ed Connelly
Optics Retard God of no Chihuahua Joined: December/16/2007 Location: USA Status: Offline Points: 24225 |
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How is SWFA going to send a scope to Europe? We can't do that.
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Gerry Atric
Optics Journeyman Joined: April/21/2011 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 340 |
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As you live in Germany, the Trijicon (good as it is) will be more expensive than a used german/austrian 8x56. Start scavenging hunting shops in your neighbourhood, have a look at e-gun for a broader search.
I´m still convinced that the priority should be good glass then illumination and if you have to sacrifice anything due to poor funds, that should be the illumination.
Gerry Atric
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dr_deerhunter
Optics GrassHopper Joined: April/27/2011 Status: Offline Points: 14 |
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My Armed Forces Europe postal address is in New Jersey. The military will take it from there. If SWFA won't ship to APO, then I would find some other place. I usually don't do business with companies that won't ship to APO/FPO. Since it was another retired military guy that told me to try the samplelist, I was assuming they ship here. |
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eurolynn
Optics Apprentice Joined: January/24/2010 Location: Oklahoma Status: Offline Points: 179 |
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Yes SWFA does ship to APOs.
Since 9/11 you can't ship items like rifle scopes to foreign lands without a ton of paperwork and a lot of time. At one time I lived in Germany as a local, not affiliation to the military, couldn't order crap thru my German address. But as soon as I went back to work with US Forces and got my APO, everything was good to go. Be sure and tell us what your final choice was, and how it worked out. And, Waidmansheil! |
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"Guns aren't toys! They're for family protection, hunting dangerous or delicious animals, and keeping the King of England out of your face!"
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ccoker
Optics Master Joined: February/13/2008 Location: Austin, TX Status: Offline Points: 2041 |
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Agreed 100% |
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