@supercorndogs is this the scope testing fixture you have been talking about? Perhaps I have missed an additional post on the matter.
Until someone is testing a statistically significant number of optics (hundreds minimum) in a fully controlled mechanical test with multiple simulated scenarios, drop tests are just a cruel game of RNG. People think about the goal of the testing in the wrong way. It's meant to raise red flags...
www.snipershide.com
I found these impact tests/testing devices/impact protocols. Not exactly sure of some of their providence.
https://mindworks.shoutwiki.com/wiki/Impact_Testing_Device_-_Nightforce_Optics
(someone made a prototype tester for NF?)
(just the first bit, showing the shaker)
https://www.pewpewtactical.com/high-end-optics-torture-test/
(they actually shot the scopes! Birdshot, 22mag lol)
#1
https://rokslide.com/forums/threads/leupold-catching-on-impact-testing-huh.296830/post-2933718
#2
https://rokslide.com/forums/threads/leupold-catching-on-impact-testing-huh.296830/post-2933546
(rokslide; arguments that both NASA and cardboard box manufacturers test in a more real-world manner, i.e. in a way a device would fall/crash)
I guess a scope manufacturer’s test is only as good as how well the test is designed, what impacts are tested, and how well the tests are carried out.
If all the test looks into is CF recoil tracking survivability, or that the lenses don’t shake free, well then that’s what info you’ll get from it.
You can draw inferences from a test like that, but not actual experimental data. That’s why they crash test cars in ways that cars are likely to be hit. They don’t just test an impact from the front and theoretically assume a side impact gives them the same info.
My problem with the rokslide tests is I am a little suspicious of the actors involved. As in, the consistency of the results (both pass and fail) seem a little weird.
Plus last time I checked they haven’t put the effort into building simple rigs (like in my second video I posted) to reduce the human influence. I’m no engineer, but if I were doing tests, I would put some effort into standardizing the tests and removing humans as much as possible. I think the idea of testing all sorts of impact angles has merit.
Heck, maybe some companies already hit windage/elevation turrets, smack parallax knobs, batter objective/eyepieces, etc etc. NF supposedly does something like that, but I don’t fully buy into it as they are a marketing machine.
Remember when in 2020 Frank shared his tracking tests that he performed on student’s scopes that were running through his classes?
In the Field Scope Tracking Test As many shooters have read in the Sniper’s Hide Forum, or have heard on the Everyday Sniper Podcast, during our precision rifle classes we removed and test scopes for tracking. The genesis behind this was twofold, first, we used to only accomplish this in our...
www.snipershide.com
I do find it fascinating that some scope companies apparently complained to SH/Frank which caused him to stop sharing the data. I hear he still compiles the data but doesn’t share it.
I know Frank’s info isn’t an impact test, but over time, it could’ve been even more interesting nonetheless.