QuoteReplyTopic: New Nikon or New Bushnell tact? Posted: April/03/2007 at 11:19
I have narrowed my scope purchase down to a New Nikon Monarch 4-16 X 42 mil-dot (it has 40 moa of adjustment), the new Bushnell 6-24 X 50 tactical mil-dot (it has 45 moa of adjustment) and a 6-20 X 50 sightron with mil-dot (it has 45 moa adjustment) all are side focus models. The Nikon will probably run about $140 cheaper. It will be put on a .243 (for now) for long range coyotes. What would your pick be?
I think any of the ones mentined will do the job quite well. The new Bushnell is an interesting scope and likely has the rainguard feature, The Nikons are very nice scopes and the Sightron should also be nice. One other option is a 2x aimpoint. I'm thinking coyotes = evening - low light possibly night time so light gathering and illuminated reticle could help.
I figure with a .243 you are probably inside 300 yds so a 2x might get you on target quickly. I also might consider a good 6x42 fixed power scope- very bright in low light.
Edited by Urimaginaryfrnd
"Always do the right thing, just because it is the right thing to do". Bobby Paul Doherty Texas Ranger
Talked to Bushnell 2 weeks ago, they state the 6-24x50 has 50" int. adj.... Might help to make the pick allittle easier, 5" extra inches.. The 4200 is proofed at 10,000 rounds of H & H, sounds tough enough.. # 426245T
Does anyone know for sure if the Bushnell 4200 6-24x50 on this website is going to be the same as the model on Bushnell's site.
I looked on bushnell's and theirs say Side focus with target turrets, an email i got from here about the bushnell says no target turrets, and also the page for this model says AO. Just curious, if anyone has acutally bought this model from this website if you could chime about
-Target turrets
-focusing
Here are the links to the two. Same stocking number and pretty much the same item description except for a few things. I plan on buying this scope pretty soon but I would really appreciate these questions answered before I do. If it is the model from Bushnells website(2nd Link) then I'll buy, but not having target turrets is definatly shying me away. Focusing not such a big deal but side focus is very nice to have.
The well-meaning drone from Bushnell is confused with the 1-inch model. Large corporations are notorious for hiring people who don't give a bleep about their product but will start at minimum wage and not ask too many questions. The ones you identify in the links above are the ones you speak of...buy from SWFA and you'll never go wrong (if by some miracle they did the same mix-up when you ordered...they would gladly exchange it for the right scope because they would realize their mistake....they are not a huge monolithic multi-product-line diversified bureaucratic behemoth).
I need to add something about the Bushnell Elite series. I will be publishing an article in October about several riflescope tests
and reviews we did. Among the ones tested was a Bushnell elite 3200 10x40 with mil-dot. It has the same target turrets as
the ones pictured above with the 4200. I know Bushnell claims that it can withstand 1,000 to 10,000 rounds on a H&H, but our
tests showed a failure at 5 rounds on a .50 BMG. One of the turrets flew off. On the other hand, it did have some very nice
optics.
I would say NO but that all dependes on what you expect. Say you wanted to sight in at 1000 yds and only shoot that distance you could do that using a plus MOA base probably a +30moa would do it. The problem then is how much adjustment do you have up and down from there. When someone says 40moa interal adjustment if you centered it that would give you 20moa up and 20 moa down.
I think it is first of all unrealistic to expect a .243 to be of any value at 1000 yds because more bullet weight is needed to carry energy that distance and retain sufficient energy to do any real damage. Second Wind Temp Humidity Elevation Angle etc all play a part in where it strikes at that range.
Now lets think more in the terms of targets coyote size in the 200 to 600yd distance which is more likely. I think you could use a 6x42 IOR tactical or a 10x42 Super Sniper and have all the scope power you could use, with the 6x42 being a brighter optic with 7mm exit eye pupil. Would you stand a good chance of getting on target fast with a 2x Aimpoint shooting at a moving target - yes. The higher the scope power the more you need a steady solid rest. You might kill more coyotes with a 3-9x40 or so than the high power basically because you can get on target faster.
"Always do the right thing, just because it is the right thing to do". Bobby Paul Doherty Texas Ranger
I have my zero at 100 yards and still have enough MOA to shoot out at 1000 and have 3 or 4 left. I'd have to go check but I know I have a few left over and enough to get out there. I have a 20MOA leatherwood base.
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