25 February 2009, 07:43
rnoviBurris Signature vs. Bush. 4200 vs. Leupold VXIII vs. Zeiss Conquest
So I'm spending a few days out of town on business this week. Lo and behold, as I set up camp in a Marriott, there is a Cabelas across the street!
I have to pinch myself. Yep, it's real.
I'm in freakin' heaven!
And I need a new scope for my AR15. Time to go shopping. Errr...actually, researching. I'm too cheap to buy without consideration and due process. I want the most bang for my buck. And I know how to make my Buck count.
By my reckoning, there is a sweet spot in the hunting scope market. It's what I call the $500 market. Or, taken another way, the best scopes the "marginally above average Joe" can afford. These aren't the Top of the Line Swaro's or S&B's (or Kahles...). Yes, those are better scopes. Nope, those scopes are well out of my budget...sure I'd like to have one, but come on, It's not like I own Dakota's. I own Remmie 700's. So this is a discussion of what I perceive the best scopes are that I would put on these rifles given my sub $500 budget.
In my mind, they are as follows (alphabetically, prices from Cabela's):
Bushnell 4200 Elite 3-9x40: $300
Burris Signature Select 3-12x44: $480
Leupold VX III 3.5-10x40: $500
Nikon Monarch 2.5-10x40: $390
Zeiss Conquest 3-9x40: $500
I'm sure there are others, but hey, let's work this list down and see where we get.
Bushnell 4200 Elite 3-9x40: $300Ok, come on. It's a $300 scope. How good can it be? You know what? It really is pretty good. The glass is clear. The reticle is sharp. 3x is every bit as good as any of the other scopes (really!). 9x is bright, clear, and pretty decently sharp. The reticle is decent. Hey, for $300 it's really a "must see" scope.
And you know what? I hated it. Yep. Sure did. And the reason for me is what I call "Haze-out". It's when the eye is slightly off center the picture immediately hazes. I mean, I had to keep my eye directly on center. Any failure and instant haze. This may or may not affect you and your eyes. But for me, it's a deal killer. I have bad enough eyes - I don't need to add an "off-center haze issue" to the game.
But for $300, it sure deserves an honorable mention.
Burris Signature Select 3-12x44: $480 Ok, is this really a fair comparison? I mean, this is a 12x scope compared against a 9x scope. But, held on it's own - clarity and brightness vs. clairty and brightness - at the same power, it's one decently impressive scope.
To be frank, I wasn't expecting a whole lot out of this scope. I have a Burris 1.5-5x on a Marlin (err, that I can't shoot for crap, but that's another story!) that I all but hate. It's haze-out is brutally bad and it's dark. I didn't think the 3-12x44 SigSel would be much better.
But it is. I rate it brighter than all but the Zeiss Conquest (which, btw, is a 9x...so not exactly fair). And it's certainly clearer than the 4200 and Monarch. And off-center haze is very well sorted out, comparable to the Leupy and certainly better than the Monarch and 4200.
Surprisingly, I wasn't that impressed at all with the Ballistic Plex reticle. If you look at a picture of it on the web it sure looks nifty! But, eh, my eyes couldn't make out the ballistic dots all that readily. There's no doubt that the "Balistic usage" of the reticle is pretty much lost in darker hours. It's a good effort, but, IMO, is just too fine of a wire to be usefull under all conditions.
Final note: this is a heavy scope! The moment I picked it up there was a sense of real substance. It's heavy. It's solid. It has that intangible feeling of quality that really cannot be duplicated. Burris put effort into the design of this thing.
Leupold VXIII 2.5-10x40Yep, it's the standard by which scopes are still judged in this category. And for a reason. It's not the brightest glass (Sig Select and Zeiss are indeed brighter) but resolution-wise the VXIII had the highest level of resolution per my eyes. I suspect that this had more to do with the coatings on the lenses blocking out certain light spectrums than others. Still, the contract was the best of the bunch and for my eyes it allowed me to see greater resolution.
I like Leupold. I really do. I love their warranty and customer service and I do really like the svelte look of the scopes. IF I were to fault the scope in any category, I'd have to say that I was surprised that it wasn't brighter. Really. I thought it would be. But both the Zeiss and Burris have it beat. In fact, the Burris was brighter at 12x than the Loop at 10x and that's saying something.
Other than that little issue, I have nothing else to say about the Leupy. It's dang good stuff and I'd be more than happy to have it on my rifle.
Nikon Monarch 2.5-10x40: $390Ok, let's be honest. I just don't like Japanese products. Really, I don't. I don't find them inferior or anything like that. It's that intangible "feel" that I don't like. Something about the Nikon just feels slightly, well, cheap. It feels lighter. Or the click adjustments just don't quite have that Leupld "click". Or something.
It's why I don't like Toyota's Camry and Honda's Accord (which are both superb vehicles). They just "feel" Japanese. I really can't explain it. Go drive a BMW 335 vs. an Infinit G37 - technically the G37 has more horsepower, is faster, grips better, etc. And yet, the BMW just "feels" right to me.
The Nikon is clear, it's decently bright (not the best, but decent), has a good reticle, and does all the things a scope should do well.
And yet, for some unexplicable reason, I don't like them. I have three friends who swear by them. I can't fault them. I'm just somehow biased against them...
(PS: I love my Nikon camera's though! Why can't Nikon build the same feel they put in their DSLR's into their scopes?)
Zeiss Conquest 3-9x40: $500Ok, now THAT'S how you build a reticle! That was the first thought that hit my mind. Damn that's a GREAT looking reticle! The wires are CRISP, CLEAN, and DON'T CHANGE COLOR when the scope is moved around. I hate that about the other scopes. Like, when you shift your eyes or head just a bit the scope wires take on a coppery glint to them.
Nope, them Zeiss wires are BLACK and they STAY BLACK.
Second thought: this scope had the widest "margin for error" when it came to focusing though it. I'm not sure I'm saying this right, but I simply didn't have to try as hard to line up and get a clear sight picture. It's as though I could hold my eye just a couple milimeter's more off-center and still get a clear and clean sight picture. Nicely done!
It's a tie for brightness with the Burris Signature Select. The Conquest wins the clarity battle though.
Plain and simple: want to go hog hunting later at night and don't want an illuminated reticle? Conquest. Seriously.
The Conquest, much to my dismay, really was better than the VXIII. I didn't want to believe the hype, but it actually was true. It had a solid, substantial feel to it. Good stuff!
So, here's my summary:
Ranking: Clarity & Crispness
1st: Zeiss Conquest
2nd: Leupld VXIII
3rd: Burris Sig Select
4th: Bushnell 4200 (if you held it just right)
5th: Nikon Monarch (could be 4th easily)
Ranking: Reticle
1st: Zeiss Conquest (and it's not even close...)
2nd: Leupold VXIII
3rd: tied for three. The Burris was a bit too fine and the Ballistic Plex is useless in darkness as it's too fine. The Bushnell was too thick in the outter wires. The Nikon strikes a decent balance, but as with any compromise it's not tops in any category.
Ranking: Brightness
1st & 2nd: Tie: Zeiss Conquest & Burris Signature Select
3rd: Leupold VXIII
4th: Bushnell 4200
5th: Nikon Monarch
Some general thoughts:
1. Conquest - feck me. It really is a damn fine scope that performs better than a comparable Leupold. They also get really expensive, really quick when looking at higher powers...which is what nixed the Conquest for me in the end.
2. Leupold VXIII - hey, I love the scope, but I found better "bang for the buck" elsewhere. I was quite surprised by that, but once I looked in the used market I found some really good deals I couldn't pass up.
3. Bushnell 4200 Elite: It should be on everyone's "Must look at once" category of scope. Certainly it wins the "Bang for the buck" category of scope.
4. Burris Signature Select: Solid, substantial, and bright. And, on the used market, these things can be had with pretty darn big savings.
5. Nikon: hey, I'm biased. Leave me alone. And for no single good reason.
So, that's my opinion. Please feel free to comment folks (but no nastiness from the Nikon faithful please!)
PS: I ended up buying a Signature Select in the end because I found a really, really good deal on a used on
www.samplelist.com!10 March 2009, 00:24
DuggaBoyeHave had EXCELLENT service from my Burris Signature scopes in hard duty.
Love my Schmidt & Bender's also , but for the money I cannot beat the Burris.
Mostly I buy low power variables, 1 to 4, 1.5 to 6 ,etc on my hunting rifles.
The current exceptions in the safe that I can recall at the moment are: a Nightforce 12 to 42 , Leupold 4 to 14, Swarovski 2.5 to 15, Doctor 3 to 9, a Zeiss 3 to 12 and a couple of others.
I might not be as "in-touch" on the current production , BUT that being said, Burris is Big Bang for the $ and their service has been exceptional.