Of course !
The explanation for this is very simple: there are substantially less lenses in a fixed power scope as opposed to a variable power scope. Typically a fixed power scope has 5 lenses, and a variable power has 9 or 10 lenses. Each lense blocks (reflects actually) a certain amount of light, despite its coating, however best-in-class the coating may be, hence the more lenses, the more light reflected away from going through the scope.
The following numbers are not exact, but let us say, for the sake of illustration, that for best-in-class German or Austrian 2020's scopes, each coated lens reflect 0.75% of the light and lets 99.25% of the light go through. A fixed power scope would have a light transmission of 96.3% and a variable power scope would have a light transmission of 92.7%. A very discerning eye could/would see the 3.6% light transmission difference, when comparing scopes side by side.
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Now, if we compare the same best-in-class German or Austrian 2020's fixed power scope with coating allowing 99.25% of the light go through, to an American or Japanese 2020's variable power scope, or to a best-in-class German or Austrian 2000's variable power scope, both with coating allowing 98.5% of the light through, which are by no mean bad scopes!!!, the difference increases to over 10%. About anyone will see the 10.3% light transmission difference, when comparing scopes side by side.
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And if for the sake of reality we compare the best-in-class German or Austrian 2020's fixed power scope, to the best-in-class German or Austrian 1980's variable power scope, many of which still sit on top of some of my (and likely yours) favorite rifles (e.g. my Steyr Mannlicher Luxus Stutzen .270 Win), the difference increases to over 16%. Any one will see the 16.7% light transmission difference, even if not comparing scopes side by side.
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Two points...
First, notwithstanding any of the above, the 1980's variable scope Zeiss Diavari 1.5-6x42 and the 1980's Zeiss BGA 10x40 binoculars, with their ~80% light transmission remain perfectly adequate hunting optics, and still beat the heck out of many modern scopes and binoculars, and I will still pick them over many modern or non-continental brands (
let us not be too specific here, as the purpose of this post is not to talk down or antagonize others' choices), so the 'salesman' premise that any scope or binocular that does not transmit 92% or 93% of the light is useless, is a complete novice fallacy.
Second, observe how small the "giant leaps" in coating technologies really are. A 1.5% difference from the 1980's to the 2020's for each lense in the above examples yields a 13% difference after going through 9 lenses...
I hope this was interesting...
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1980's Zeiss Diavari 1.5-6x42 (and 1980's Zeiss BGA 10x40 binoculars) with their ~80% light transmission did the job then, and remain perfectly adequate hunting optics today. Actually, they are still far better than many, many modern offerings............... I only wish my own eyes would have aged with as much grace over the last 40 years.....................