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Rifle Scopes H59 or Tremor?

The T3 lines seem thinner and easier to see thru than the H59 to my eyes ... and of course the wind dots ...

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T3 at 22x looking at targets at about 550yds
 
I have H59 scopes. Played with the T3, just don’t see the point for my application. Haven’t ruled them out, but just don’t need the additions it offers.
 
"The Refined Mil Reticle" = TRMR = TReMoR ??

Well I think "Horus Vision" gets credit for the design.
 
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H59 is sufficient - tremor has too much crap (wind dots that are kind of useless).
 
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Nothing special about an h59. The utility of the tremor reticles are the wind/time of flight dots. The reticles does not preclude the use of the traditional wind formula either
 
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I have both the T3 in a 5-25 pmII and the H59 in a 3-27 hi power and I like both. Looking at them on paper I struggled with both a little but H59 seemed hardest to look at. To me either on paper look busy. You get in a field situation and it’s a different story. The human brain filters out a lot of what you’re not focused on. The H59 is on my ELR rifle and I like being able to use grid for corrections and the target dot is a good size IMO. The T3 I don’t use the the fullest all the time but when time has been limited or can’t dial the wind dots work, you just need to know what MPH your gun is to the dot. To say wind dot is useless is wrong, you might not use them, or haven’t taken the time to work them out with your rifle, they work if you learn them just like anything.
 
What one do you like better? What looks/feels better to you? I can tell you what I like, blonds red heads, but it's all about what your comfortable with. Both will give you good information .
 
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Tremor seems thinner to me and i really didn't like the thickness of the h59 that i had in both my HDMR II and MK5. I'd go Tremor out of the two.
 
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The TREMOR was less intrusive than the H59 IMO. At the end of the day, I didn't like either.
 
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Most of my wind calling is intuitive based on experience anyway so I don't need the T3 wind dots.

In bad winds I dial windage vs holding off like I normally would, well I'd be dialing elevation by then.

If it's too windy I pack up and go home, lol. I shoot to have fun, not be tortured by nature.

In dynamic stages when off a steady rest, like off the bipod, I'm dialed down to 15x or so, so personally I think the thickness of the reticle in the H59 is well suited for such when holding over and off.

I recently sold a scope which had a thinner reticle because when dialed down it wasn't easy to see and the other reason is I don't like it when reticles go from .2's to .5's in the tree. Up on max mag or close to it I liked the thinner reticle. Such is life with FFP. Come to think of it I've never missed a target because a reticle was too thick???
 
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What one do you like better? What looks/feels better to you? I can tell you what I like, blonds red heads, but it's all about what your comfortable with. Both will give you good information .
Well the problem with that is you can't find one on the shelf at a store here in Wisconsin, at least that I know of, and coming up with the funds for a scope that I haven't looked through or investigated to a certain extent is not something I'd do, which is why I'm posting the question. I can look through a number of Vortex scopes and really like the HD AMG's and Gen II Razors but want to look through as many as possible. That's the problem in my opinion with looking for a high end or even a medium level quality/cost scope. It's not easy if you don't have a shop that offers that type of product.
 
Well, if you can't look thru one, here are a few thru the lens pics. Thru the lens pics suck, especially with my phone cameras, especially with me taking them, but its all I got.


Some steel yotes at about 550yds at a match. You can click on these pics to see a larger versions. All these are T3, most are the NF 7-35x a few a L&S mk6 3-18x.
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500yds steel and paper on my land
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500yds steel with PVS-30
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415yd mineral feeder in the day
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415yds mineral feeder at night with the PVS-9
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750yds steel in the rain. The target is just left of the verticle line at the 6 mil UP hold mark, which was pretty much extactly where I was holding for the base wind (2mph) that day.

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Cattle in the SE pasture at 334 yds with the UTCx

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And just to clarify, I use "no-dial" shooting with the T3s because I have range finders mounted on the rifles with the T3 reticles and for ranging, the dial needs to be at the 100yd zero. After about 1000yds I have to dial up 5 mils. That throws off the range finder and the wind dots (for the .300WM) then change for 5 mph value for each dot, to 2.5 MPH value for each dot. If I was to dial up 10 mils, then the 5 MPH wind dot value for the .300WM(24) becomes 1.25 MPH per dot and with 8 wind dots, that gives you support for up to 10 mph (though you can extrapolate to 11.25) easily with 10 mils and 20 mph (extrapolate to 22.5) with 5 mils.
So, no dial shooting up to 1,000 yds for me with the T3, keeps the range finders in business.

Note, the wind dot value for my .308WIN(22) and 6.5G(18) are 4 mph each and for the 5.56(18) 3 mph each. So, when using the wind dots, you just estimate the wind in MPH and hold that amount. I usually run a 2 minute wind estimating exercise before each string of say 5 rounds. I measure the low, average and high wind and listen for the sounds (mostly of the trees) to mark the high and low wind. I also observe the trees moving at various points along the bullet path. I then hold for that MPH and can adjust my hold to align with what I hear and see. You think and hold in MPH, no need to convert to mils for the wind holds. That's the value of the wind dots.
 
Let me know if you in SW Michigan you can try mine, I m sure there's plenty of people who would let you try theirs out.
 
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Here is a couple of my T3 at 500 yard kyl rack around 12-15 x in a s&b 5-25 the other is 395 yard small ipsc can’t remember if it’s 50% or 2/3 on the same magnification. It was a drizzling overcast day.
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Here is a couple of my T3 at 500 yard kyl rack around 12-15 x in a s&b 5-25 the other is 395 yard small ipsc can’t remember if it’s 50% or 2/3 on the same magnification. It was a drizzling overcast day. View attachment 6964176View attachment 6964177
That gives you a pretty good idea what the reticles look like against something other than a white background. Thank you for including the pics and the descriptions. It helps.
 
Here is a tutorial I found on the TheRefineMilReticle done by Todd Hodnett, the designer of the reticle:
 
That gives you a pretty good idea what the reticles look like against something other than a white background. Thank you for including the pics and the descriptions. It helps.

Much clearer to zoom in on original pic but thought it would help seeing it with targets and background. I’ll see if I can find one from my h59
 
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Thanks for all the insights. Looking at a optic for battle rifle and trying to pick a decent optic and reticle. Looking at h59 . I like the skmr3 but not avail with s&b.
 
I was torn between the h59 and tremor as well. I had some opportunities to look through the h59 on some work guns and was pretty happy with what I saw. After a few months of research and debating with myself I went with the tremor3. I really like the concept and use of the wind dots and wanted to give it a try. I've got about 500 rounds though the rifle with it and so far I'm happy. Most of that time was spent trying to diag an accuracy issue, and doing load dev. For that use it didnt feel busy at all and the center dot made for a very consistent aim point. I'll be heading out this weekend to shoot at some decent distance and should be able to get a good feel for usage if the wind dots. But as of now i think it's going to work great for me
 
I have both an like both. I use a S&B 3x27 H-59 on the .338lm for ELR shooting and the S&B 5x25 T3 on my 6cm with i shoot out to over 1000 yards.
 
I've owned both, the Tremor3 wind dots are great for wind calls, I'd never go back.
 
I've owned both, the Tremor3 wind dots are great for wind calls, I'd never go back.

Agreed. I got a chance to take my tremor3 out today in some wind for a change. Winds were anywhere from 0 to 16mph, quite gusty. Shooting out to 800m with a 6.5 creedmoor and I have to say the dots made life easy. I'm definitely sold on it
 
Agreed. I got a chance to take my tremor3 out today in some wind for a change. Winds were anywhere from 0 to 16mph, quite gusty. Shooting out to 800m with a 6.5 creedmoor and I have to say the dots made life easy. I'm definitely sold on it

Easy is good. I know you can fundamentally do the wind calls without the dots, trust me I've done it for a long time. But not having to think about the calculations each time can be invaluable, especially when under pressure. When you're under pressure simplicity may be the most valuable element of anything you do. I don't do any competition shooting, not yet anyway. Everything I do is in the field, mostly hunting. When I'm hunting coyotes there's no time to figure out a MIL formula for wind, if I don't take the shot now then I miss the shot completely.
 
I finally found a pic of my H58 (now upgraded to a T3)

9wmKPDN.jpg


This is 600yds at paper target. The reason it is fuzzy is I am prone literally down in the weeds. At min magnification, I could not see the target at all, just the weeds. But on max magnification I was "burning thru" the weeds and able to see and hit at least a fuzzy target. This is repeatable on different days with different scopes. I still haven't figured out exactly how this "burn thru" process works. But I definitely think the T3 is easier to see THRU than the H58/H59.
 
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This reticle by Leupold, The FFP CCH seems to be Leupold's entry in to the elaborate reticles: https://www.leupold.com/reticles/reticle-ffp-cch-177

Leupold sent me the subtensions diagrams which are attached here. Of all of them I would have to say I almost like Vortex's MRAD the most but the Tremor3, H59, and Leupold's CCH all have positive aspects.
 

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  • CCH Subtensions Center Detail (1).pdf
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  • CCH Subtensions (1).pdf
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This reticle by Leupold, The FFP CCH seems to be Leupold's entry in to the elaborate reticles: https://www.leupold.com/reticles/reticle-ffp-cch-177

Leupold sent me the subtensions diagrams which are attached here. Of all of them I would have to say I almost like Vortex's MRAD the most but the Tremor3, H59, and Leupold's CCH all have positive aspects.
Here are some non download necessary views
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This one's been around. T3 on the left and H59 on the right.

View attachment 6963478

For all intents and purposes both reticles main stadia subtends .050 MRAD and center dot is .050. All other lines are also sized the same with the only difference being the dots added on the T3. Illustrations can be very misleading.
 
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Agreed. Chopping screen shots from the Horus website for this has it's limitations.
 
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Used to have H59's, then tried the T3 and won't go back to anything else. All of my optics are T3 now.

T3 is just an H59 with the wind dots added so you essentially still have an H59, just enhanced.


^^^^

Ditto. I have both T3 and H59 reticles in my scopes. To my eye, the line sub-tensions are the same and the only thing that the T3 offers is more versatility with the wind dots, which are hugely useful once you have developed your wind-calling skill. The T3 is what I would ultimately recommend as it is a more evolved H59 and what the Tremor 2 should have been back when Horus introduced the wind dot feature.
 
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Funny thing. I just got a Leupold Mark 4 ER/T 6.5-20x50 FFP TMR mil scope for nothing. Called Leupold about putting an H59 in it. They said the best they could do is a H58. Shipped out today so I guess I’m going backwards.
 
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Are the Tremor3 wind dots calibrated for a particular caliber?

Yes, and no. They can be applied to every caliber, but the wind values seem to pair best with a 4-ish mph value for a 308.
 
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Yes, and no. They can be applied to every caliber, but the wind values seem to pair best with a 4-ish mph value for a 308.
That's what I was thinking. Glad you are confirming that. When I watched Todd Hodnett's Magpul DVD, the Art of Long Range or something to that effect which I sold here on the hide for $60 and now you can't find it for less than $300 (wish I'd a waited), when he had the guys from Magpul shooting in the prone they were all using either 308's or 300WM at 1,000 yards and a mile (DVD was made before 6.5 Creedmoor). He seemed to be giving them corrections for a 308 for the most part.
 
Maybe it’s just me but I prefer the h59 because the mils on the main horizontal are numbered where the tremor3 are not. Also, I had a T3 and never used the wind dots because as you dial elevation the value changes (doubles or halved I forget) and it was just easier for me to remember a mil hold than wind dots and what they’re new value was.
 
Here are some non download necessary views
View attachment 6966609
View attachment 6966610
The CCH reticle comes in at about $100 less on the Mark 5 scopes. Seems like an interesting feature set except when you actually look at the reticle there are those large pointers coming in from the four directionals. What is their function? Anyone know? They kind of seem like a largish distraction.
 
I finally found a pic of my H58 (now upgraded to a T3)

9wmKPDN.jpg


This is 600yds at paper target. The reason it is fuzzy is I am prone literally down in the weeds. At min magnification, I could not see the target at all, just the weeds. But on max magnification I was "burning thru" the weeds and able to see and hit at least a fuzzy target. This is repeatable on different days with different scopes. I still haven't figured out exactly how this "burn thru" process works. But I definitely think the T3 is easier to see THRU than the H58/H59.

What do the stepped hash marks above the horizontal signify?