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Gen 2 Razor has very flexible eye relief. Kahles K624i has wider FOV and equally or more flexible eye relief. With K525i coming out, I suspect there will be some very reasonable prices on the K624i.
Now to be clear, I think that most scopes in this range have perfectly reasonable eye relief flexibility and FOV, and the differences between them are not very large. There are exceptions, but in use, the biggest differences between similarly priced quality scopes come down to reticles and controls.
With K624i, to me, the reason you buy it is if you like their reticles (which I generally do) and if you like the center mounted parallax (which I also do; especially when I practice shooting lefty). Optically, while very good, I do not think it is quite as good as some of the competing designs (we already had the CA discussion, so I am not going to rehash it here), which is why K525i is coming that I expect to be absolutely world class.
Now, with all that out of the way, if you like the turrets and reticle of Razor Gen 2, and already have two of them, there are good reasons to stick with that, so you do not have re-train yourself.
If you simply want to try something different, start with picking a reticle you like.
ILya
I know how you can get a brand new Kahles for $2600.
I'm selling a certificate in the Optics for Sale section that will give you $400 off retail on a K624i. $500 off on a K318i, or $550 off the new K525i.
Pretty good gig.
I know how you can get a brand new Kahles for $2600.
I'm selling a certificate in the Optics for Sale section that will give you $400 off retail on a K624i. $500 off on a K318i, or $550 off the new K525i.
Pretty good gig.