I understand. You broke one.
You aren't the first guy to do that. They aren't invincible. I was discussing someone's tracking being off. A functioning scope that tracked improperly.
And I don't know what standard a person applies to a duty weapon, but the XTR ' has an extremely low rate of return. Even lower still for catastrophic failure like yours. It's a shame vendors don't share those numbers. Having heard the numbers myself I'm sure they can go head to head with anyone in the durability department.
in another thread, Frank listed the Burris as one of his favorite scopes under $1500. He said he has seen bunches of them in his classes, and owns one of the early releases. He's never seen one break or fail to perform perfectly. That's a pretty strong testimony from a guy who sees a lot of scopes put through their paces.
In all honesty, that is why you don't see me bashing them at every turn.
I really like the scope, it is very well designed, the features are awesome.
When you're in the middle of a string of fire and you lose your zero, it is a problem.
I had .6 mils elevation dialed in (shooting at 200 with 100 yard zero) and I was suddenly shooting 6 mils low. (not .6). What I believe happened was the spring applying pressure to the erector tube either gave out or slipped off the erector as my windage was still good.
The fact that I would have to explain in civil court why I shot the innocent person instead of the bad guy is the standard I apply to duty optics.
A 6 mil variation from your zero would be tough to justify, especially if it was a "known" issue.
I am not saying there is a problem with all XTR II scopes, I am saying there was a problem with mine. Burris got on the repair quickly, but I did not have a warm fuzzy with their explanation of the problem.They basically said it was user error, that I had cranked the adjustment to the point there was no more "down" adjustment available, which was not the case.