27 April 2010, 23:49
StonecreekRedfield "Hunter"?
I recently came by a Redfield model which I had never seen before. It is a 3-9X40 marked "Redfield", "Hunter", and "U.S.A.", leading me to believe it may date back to the Denver days. It is definately a "leader" lower-priced scope with a fairly decent matte finish and very clean lines. There is no color or embellishment anywhere on the piece -- just matte black. It does have a duplex (Redfield would have called it "4-plex") reticle. Optics are passable, but do show distortion near the edges of the field.
Is anyone familiar with this scope and its production time-frame?
28 April 2010, 02:50
airgun1That is a fairly late Denver (I think still Denver) made scope. It would be with the 5 Stars, Hunter, and the other budget model, the Tracker. This would be the last Redfields covered by the original warranty (long gone now though). Shortly after these started all of the changes in design and ownership, too numerous to remember.
ETA: Deleted my incoherant off topic BS.
28 April 2010, 09:20
Ehg5640These are "new" Redfield scopes produced by Leupold within the last year. I have purchased two, simply due to the Redfield name from the past. Both seem to be satisfactory scopes. I put one on a .450 NE 3 1/4 inch Ruger #1 H, and the other on a Ruger #1 .416 Rigby. Both survived. I am satisfied enough to order two more. One in a 2-7 and thr other in a 3-9. They are now made in Oregon, where the Redfiel's originated to begin with.
28 April 2010, 20:12
butchloci believe the new redfields are called evolution. as i remember it the hunter was a bottom line redfield made in the 70-80's. i think they were made after don burris left redfield and were made to compete against things like tasco
28 April 2010, 22:57
Stonecreekquote:
Originally posted by butchloc:
i believe the new redfields are called evolution. as i remember it the hunter was a bottom line redfield made in the 70-80's. i think they were made after don burris left redfield and were made to compete against things like tasco
I'm certain this is correct. The scope I have is DEFINATELY not the current Leupold-produced model. The scope has very clean lines, but only so-so optics, and the guy I got it from had had it put away in a closet for so many years that he had forgotten he even owned it.
I would rate this scope as a notch below the current Evolution and a notch above a Simmons and such. I haven't had it mounted on anything so cannot comment on its adjustments, but the old Redfields were pretty good in this area. Of course, its power cam could be so eccentric that the zero wanders by a foot when going from 3 to 9 power
