Laniarius
AH enthusiast
- Joined
- Nov 24, 2017
- Messages
- 309
- Reaction score
- 402
- Location
- Toronto area, Canada
- Member of
- Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters (OFAH)
- Hunted
- Ontario, Namibia, Alaska
In case it helps others, I'd like to share something I probably could have realized before I bought a Leupold VX-3HD. I bought the scope (a 2.5-8x36) because I wanted to try something really light (about 12 oz or less), with magnification in about that range, and with good long eye relief. I know the Swaro Z3 3-9x36 has better glass but I want more than the 3.5" eye relief in the Swaro. The VX-3HD eye relief is 3.6" at 8x but varies to over 4" at lower magnification. Having it mounted on the rifle and trying various comparisons and measuring it, I found the Leupold published eye relief to be accurate for this scope, as far as I could tell. I decided to try to the VX-3HD instead of a used 3i or older VX-3, because I've read that the HD is a step up in quality.
I have owned a VX-Freedom scope with the CDS dial, but sold it because I almost never have an opportunity to shoot much past 100-150 yards and I like to keep it simple. For this new scope, I was willing to live with a wheelygig I didn't want for the sake of the best glass I could get given my other parameters. I knew that the VX-3HD had a locking CDS, but I didn't realize that this meant that you have to remove it to zero the elevation. I get that the idea is you zero at some relatively short zeroing range, then only have to dial up for farther shots. Then, it's easy to return to zero and lock it back there. That seems like a good idea, and I can see the benefit for people who can expect to shoot longer ranges than I do. I've only used the basic dial that comes with the scope so far, but as I understand it the same thing applies when you use a custom dial.
I just don't like the idea of having to fish out a tiny Allen wrench to zero a scope. Maybe it's stupid that I didn't fully research that detail before buying. I just thought, "ok, the higher end CDS dials have a zero lock, sounds ok". Having tried it now, it makes me picture a situation where you drop the rifle and need to re-zero. If you need to go up a few clicks, that's easy, but to go down past the locked zero, you need to remove the CDS cap. I don't want to have to use a small tool for that. Similarly, travelling to Africa and adjusting zero at elevation and temperature different from home. It's not a huge problem but it bothers me. One could easily lose the tiny Allen wrench. Anyway, I really should have gone for an older scope without the wheelygig. The 3i and earlier models are probably good enough and I'd rather have the simplicity of only having to unscrew a cap to zero. I will not be keeping this scope.
I have owned a VX-Freedom scope with the CDS dial, but sold it because I almost never have an opportunity to shoot much past 100-150 yards and I like to keep it simple. For this new scope, I was willing to live with a wheelygig I didn't want for the sake of the best glass I could get given my other parameters. I knew that the VX-3HD had a locking CDS, but I didn't realize that this meant that you have to remove it to zero the elevation. I get that the idea is you zero at some relatively short zeroing range, then only have to dial up for farther shots. Then, it's easy to return to zero and lock it back there. That seems like a good idea, and I can see the benefit for people who can expect to shoot longer ranges than I do. I've only used the basic dial that comes with the scope so far, but as I understand it the same thing applies when you use a custom dial.
I just don't like the idea of having to fish out a tiny Allen wrench to zero a scope. Maybe it's stupid that I didn't fully research that detail before buying. I just thought, "ok, the higher end CDS dials have a zero lock, sounds ok". Having tried it now, it makes me picture a situation where you drop the rifle and need to re-zero. If you need to go up a few clicks, that's easy, but to go down past the locked zero, you need to remove the CDS cap. I don't want to have to use a small tool for that. Similarly, travelling to Africa and adjusting zero at elevation and temperature different from home. It's not a huge problem but it bothers me. One could easily lose the tiny Allen wrench. Anyway, I really should have gone for an older scope without the wheelygig. The 3i and earlier models are probably good enough and I'd rather have the simplicity of only having to unscrew a cap to zero. I will not be keeping this scope.