My setup is a 6x fixed telescope on all my hunting rifles, which are basically stock standard themselves.
I love a fixed scope for hunting. By nature of the simplicity of the design, you always get more bang for your buck with respect to image quality. When you shoot a lot of the same kind of animal, you get good at judging distance based on the size of the animal in the scope picture. The only downside, is if you want to use the same scope of delicate load development work and target shooting. But they have become very scarce, a pity.
I have done load development using peep sights for most of my shooting experience over 20 years. You might be surprised how precise you can aim and shoot like that. No special skill required.
I see a lot of times shooters blame the low magnification scopes that they use when in actual fact it is the load or the rifle that is not producing the groups that they want.
I have done load development using peep sights for most of my shooting experience over 20 years. You might be surprised how precise you can aim and shoot like that. No special skill required.
I see a lot of times shooters blame the low magnification scopes that they use when in actual fact it is the load or the rifle that is not producing the groups that they want.
Please elaborate - which calibres and distances?
.308Win, .303Brit
All done at 100m.
I see a lot of times shooters blame the low magnification scopes that they use when in actual fact it is the load or the rifle that is not producing the groups that they want.
Please elaborate - which calibres and distances?
I know a 50 BMG shooter that uses a 10x fixed power scope. Good enough for him to compete with to 2 miles.