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| I have one on a Marlin 882 22mag bolt rifle. I bought it for popping cats at night. All I can tell you is its a major piece of shit! The eye relief sucks and the sight picture is majorly distorted. The lighted reticle is okay for lining up on a set of cat-eyes at night though. I keep this rifle hidden when friends come over, don't want 'em laughing too hard.
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| I only have experience with one bsa scope which co-worker bought because of the low price.I wouldn't even mount it on a 22.It is not clear at all and the point of impact wanders with changes in power. |
| Posts: 3104 | Location: alberta,canada | Registered: 28 January 2002 | 
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| There's a lot of difference in their scopes between models. I have two of their platinum target scopes and shoot them in local competitive .22 benchrest matches (Anschutz and Kimber; heavy and light). They work flawlessly. The cheaper hunting scopes are not nearly as good.
There is no rule of thumb for bargain scopes. It's a matter of try and see. |
| Posts: 1238 | Location: Lexington, Kentucky, USA | Registered: 04 February 2003 | 
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| As suggested, you are miles ahead by putting your money into a custom reticle for your Leupold. Or, as liquid as Leupolds are, pull it off the gun and sell it, then buy a new (or used) Leupold with the reticle you prefer. |
| Posts: 13349 | Location: Henly, TX, USA | Registered: 04 April 2001 | 
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| .358, You could try the "crosshair illuminator" at the bottom of this page: https://www.eabco.com/sale1004.html I have one at home, but have not tried it yet, so I can't give you a thumbs up/down. You can get spare bulbs at Radio Shack.... Regards, Bill |
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