What do you guys think are the most durable LPVOs? I am considering a Tango 6T SFP but I am wondering if it is worth saving up for the ATACR.
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Create a channel Learn moreThe Trijicon VCOG is advertised, by Trijicon, as durable. From their website: With a forged 7075-T6 aircraft-aluminum-alloy housing, the VCOG® is an exceptionally durable and nearly indestructible sighting system.
See this argument over and over on places like arfcom and the like.
That "thick candy shell" ain't worth a hill of beans if the internals are shit. Not saying the VCOGs are (though I've seen a few in the early years that wouldn't hold zero). Though most LPVO's are "set and forget", shock and g's don't care what it's wrapped in....once the internals are fucked, you're done. And if it's bad enough, you're fucked no matter what you got.
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I have heard of unexpected VCOG failures. Enough that it puts me off from them. Doesn’t help that they’re generally not very appealing, feature-wise. Though I’d rather hear reports from USMC armorers before condemning them for not living up to their durability claims.
I think most of the popular lpvos made in low in Japan will be pretty solid. Here are a few examples : primary arms plxc, vortex razor, nightforce nx8. And nf atacr for a assembled in USA if I'm not mistaken.
Great point. This gets me thinking that an argument could be made that a 2nd focal plane razor 1-6 for example could be thought of as more durable than a razor 1-10 first focal plane based on the the 1-6 having a much more usable reticle at 1x without illumination than the 1-10 .The SAI, NF NXS/NX8, and the other upper-mid tier that do not fully depend on the electronic package to be effective would get my vote for best bang for the buck. Razor 1-6 deserves mention as well
Great point. This gets me thinking that an argument could be made that a 2nd focal plane razor 1-6 for example could be thought of as more durable than a razor 1-10 first focal plane based on the the 1-6 having a much more usable reticle at 1x without illumination than the 1-10 .
Trijicons variable optics have disappointed me as a whole aside from what I saw from the demo sample that couldn’t make it a half day in an OE carbine course.
For clarification, are you saying even excluding the demo that failed during the carbine course, Trijicon’s LPVOs have disappointed you as a whole or did you mean to say they haven’t disappointed you as a whole with exception of the demo that went down?
While this place is understandably pro-FFP, the 2nd FP LPVO makes more sense for most in that case. However, it's more to do with reticle design than mere focal plane. Despite my preference for S&B LPVO's, they're stupid for using skeletonized reticles on FFP LPVO's and wanting to be reliant on their LED emitter on 1x/1.1x given that has accounted for the majority of my S&B service returns for a variety of reasons related to the adjustment dial/LED emitter.
Some FFP's are still quite usable on their bottom end. I will note the CQBSS with the TMR was thought out in that respect for the 3x different thicknesses of crosshair where the user despite magnification always had some degree of visible crosshair to work with.
(The CQBSS might've been a contender for one of the more robust LPVO's...)
Hence, my stance on understanding what is likely to fail and understanding what one can or can not live without in regards to the optics specs/features.
I mostly wanted to stick with FFP because I hate introducing any additional thought into my shooting workflow if I don't have to.
Are you jumping it, diving it, or falling off the side of a mountain regularly with it?What do you guys think are the most durable LPVOs? I am considering a Tango 6T SFP but I am wondering if it is worth saving up for the ATACR.
Are you jumping it, diving it, or falling off the side of a mountain regularly with it?
If no, then its a stupid question to ask and even dumber rational to purchase one based on.
You downplay the importance of a durable optic. Plenty of people have failures when camping, hiking, hunting, during competitions, and during courses.Are you jumping it, diving it, or falling off the side of a mountain regularly with it?
If no, then it’s a stupid question to ask and even dumber rational to purchase one based on.
No it's a moot point. Any lpvo over $500 is going to be robust enough for just about any shooting application someone here will need it for. Leupolds which are on the flimsier side of the spectrum have been a mainstay of military and LE rifles for many decades.Probably not the ideal factor for selection but probably not as moot as you make it to be.
Mountains and parachutes aside a rifle has NEVER hit the deck from being in a rack next to the rifle of a Clutz who is all thumbs. Maybe lean it up against the truck and that friendly K9 decides he wants to give a sniff and knocks it over.
And no optic has ever shit the bed without suffering trauma…nope.
My SAI is on a rifle that I treat like absolute garbage, and it has withstood the test of time. I'm definitely not saying it's the most durable optic, but it's certainly not fragile either, and would agree with "bang-for-buck".The SAI, NF NXS/NX8, and the other upper-mid tier that do not fully depend on the electronic package to be effective would get my vote for best bang for the buck. Razor 1-6 deserves mention as well
I have three SAI6 scopes at this point including one of the very early ones that was treated like a red headed step child. It held up without any issues. The two new ones I have with mrad reticle have not yet been abused much, but it is coming. Optically, they look very good. Probably a little better than the original SAI6, but that might simply be sample variation. Assembly quality is spectacular on all three.My SAI is on a rifle that I treat like absolute garbage, and it has withstood the test of time. I'm definitely not saying it's the most durable optic, but it's certainly not fragile either, and would agree with "bang-for-buck".
I wish mine was MRAD rather than BDC. Luckily Armament was nice enough to give me a conversion of BDC to MRAD on the 7.62 1-6.I have three SAI6 scopes at this point including one of the very early ones that was treated like a red headed step child. It held up without any issues. The two new ones I have with mrad reticle have not yet been abused much, but it is coming. Optically, they look very good. Probably a little better than the original SAI6, but that might simply be sample variation. Assembly quality is spectacular on all three.
ILya
With thermal clip ons the FFP is nice.I'm willing to bet will never be used outside of MAX 6x magnification.
With thermal clip ons the FFP is nice.
A lot easier to do things at 5x than 10x
.50BMG has a weird recoil impulse. Obviously most optics weren't built for it. We used to destroy a lot of optics. I had a little Super Sniper that held up for about 1,000 rounds before catastrophic failure. To be fair I also have problems with my Nightforce NXS on my .50 BMG (bolt gun). I loose elevation. After contacting Nightforce they suggested I reset the zero stop which seemed to temporarily fix the issue.On gas guns, scopes take much worse of a beating, especially AR-10s and piston guns with much higher spring weights and reciprocating mass slamming into the breech and barrel extension on the return-stroke. There are 3 spiked events on an accelerometer within a fraction of a second.
Scopes historically have been built to take linear rearward g forces from bolt guns, and the companies that cared about their reputation or had to meet military contracts on the bolt gun sniper systems did their due diligence in R&D to find what would hold together.
That quickly transitioned over to semi-autos with the prevalence of SR-25s and DMRs with tons of user feedback from units that actually have high-volume shoot schedules. The S&B Short Dot is an example that was born from those specific user requirements, with a lot of direct user-to-manufacturer requests.
The optics companies I’ve talked with said in order to make a durable variable power scope for use on gas guns, they had to use epoxy to set the lenses and optics modules in-position in the tubes and inner tube, otherwise they come loose under fire and reciprocating mass impacts that shock the scope in both directions. I think Vortex even developed their own CNC machine to do the epoxy application for their lenses and modules to ensure uniform application of the bonding compound, which used to be hand-applied over 10 years ago.
Tom Beckstrand wrote an excellent article on this after visiting as many scope manufacturers as he could and getting access to their engineers to discuss why they did things the way they did. He covered fast vs slow scopes, SFP and FFP internals, different company engineering philosophies, optical element materials, grinding, coatings, polishing, lens count, erectors, magnification mechanics, Side Focus vs front focus, diopter adjustment, elevation and windage mechanics, springs, reticles, knobs, etc.
NightForce and Vortex (higher end lines) seemed to address those semi auto durability issues the best at the time, especially if you wanted to run an AR-10 or SCAR.
One of the other shooting communities who saw this problem early-on were the .50 BMG shooters who shot their Barretts a lot. They broke a lot of scopes until they started using NightForce.
I know NF also uses Titanium leaf springs in their erectors that are heat-treated into the bent position, then compressed for a month, then allowed to go back into position. If they don’t return to heat-treated position, they are rejected and don’t go into the scope.
So when a company emphasizes the construction of their outer tube, that’s just a given. The inner components and how they are mounted and manipulated are very difficult to get right.
Probably a solid optic for AR platforms is the Elcan. That thing seems to be the winner for durability.
Someone had to post it:
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Forever ruint by that redbull 1 mi bullshit.
But..., if you're really worried it IS a solution...
At the risk of sounding cheap but still remaining in the durable and quality camp, I wish SWFA would add a 3 and/or 4x to their SS scope line. If they could minimize the overall size a bit, that would be a pretty much bomb proof fixed power scope for AR's. Matthew Tibor, aka Tiborasaurus Rex, did a great review of the SWFA 10x, a scope he mercilessly beat up on. If I remember correctly, after all the freezing, drowning, dropping and throwing it around, etc. that he did to the scope, the only thing that finally happened is the gas apparently leaked out but the scope still held zero! That's impressive build quality. Mil reticle, mil turrets, good glass, and customer service second to none, I think I'll shoot a letter off to SWFA now and see if they could come up with a 3x. Even if they have to keep the same scope tube size, a 3x would make a very usable addition for hunting / battle rifles. I have the 6x and 10x but my shooting range only goes out to 400 yards and the concept of 1x for every 100 yards works well for me. To each his own, however.With variable optics, you have lenses moving in a linear fashion....this is where the Elcan Spectre made me very uneasy given the supposed "zero shift" issues between 1 and 4x. I have to believe that over time, that switch function would indeed change slightly or incur some degree of play within the mechanism or optical alignment and ultimately have a variance in POI.
This is why I was sad to see the OS4x go, in today's market that thing with an ACRO or MPS would be a beast...provided one had a beer can handy for those ARMs levers
Stuff like this is why we can't have nice things!Batman used a Barska scope to kill Superman.
When aliens visit earth a billion years from now, the only signs that this planet once held intelligent life will be the Barska scopes that still work.
#Barska is best.