Vortex Razor LHT

It’s a Razor Light weight Hunting scope not designed for extreme range use but can double as an SPR type scope.
Most hunting shots are under 400 yards do
No more than 6 mils is generally needed

If it was built as tough and with all the features of a Gen 3 Razor it would look snd cost like a Gen 3 Razor

Great glass
Yes I know.

Except Razor is a flagship labeling. I had a old 1st gen Razor 5-20 that was pretty good so I expected similar and knew the G3 Razors were way better so I assumed which was a mistake.

I bet if a vote were took there'd be a bunch of us that would pay the money for a Razor LHT upgraded appropriately to reflect the line it should have represented to begin with. Put good turrets on it, a better reticle design, daylight bright illume, and it'd be not what it is now.
 
Yes I know.

Except Razor is a flagship labeling. I had a old 1st gen Razor 5-20 that was pretty good so I expected similar and knew the G3 Razors were way better so I assumed which was a mistake.

I bet if a vote were took there'd be a bunch of us that would pay the money for a Razor LHT upgraded appropriately to reflect the line it should have represented to begin with. Put good turrets on it, a better reticle design, daylight bright illume, and it'd be not what it is now.
They are bringing out just what you’re asking for 4-24x44 Razor. Should be released any day now
 
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Lets hope it comes out in a more accepted overall form.

There are already pics out of it and a whole thread about it. Looks like a little brother to the 6-36 but with a capped windage and is about 31 ounces.

1756165649143.jpeg
 
There are already pics out of it and a whole thread about it. Looks like a little brother to the 6-36 but with a capped windage and is about 31 ounces.

View attachment 8754285
Not exactly what I'm looking for because of the weight but I like the size of it for the mag range and as long as the 6x ratio, while being so "compact", doesn't compromise the IQ much, well good on Vortex. But I'm sure many will want that scope.
Any specifics on the reticle yet?
Daylight bright illume?

Been shooting my March DFP shorty 1-10 a lot lately and the poor thing doesn't pull of 10x well which is why I haven't bought their DFP 1.5-15, although it's the only scope that is close enough for what I want to interest me.

I still like my Helos G2 2-12 but I'd really like a higher quality version as well as more magnification on top because 2x hardly gets used. Like a 2.2x-13.2x38 would be cool but lighter weight and some other changes.

I'll keep watching and waiting.
 
As much as I dislike the compromised IQ on higher magnification I think I'm going to get a March DFP 1.5-15×42. Wish it was a little lighter but there's no perfect scope.

I used the March 1-10 enough recently that I found DFP and a daylight bright dot to be great features I enjoyed in actuality and the 1.5-15 has them.
 
I still have my original one. It has not skipped a beat. I have tested a few more over the years.

The simple truth is that vast majority of the time, when scopes fail, it is some sort of a catastrophic error where it is obvious (reticle falls out, etc).

This whole "small zero shifts" business is almost never the scope.

ILya
I hesitate to open this can of worms, but I'm really interested in your opinion on a specific aspect of this. I haven't seen the proofing setup for the infamous Rokslide evals addressed (though it's tough to do an exhaustive search for all the conversations that happened a couple years ago when this was the hot topic of discussion). When they have a rifle bonded to a chassis, that reliably passes the evals with NF, SWFA, certain Maven and multiple Trijicon models (and a few others like older fixed Leupold, LRHS, S&B etc), wouldn't that seem to indicate that a scope can be built to withstand that kind of impact and that the eval does indeed reliably test for that level of robustness?

If multiple samples of a Leupold or Vortex scope get mounted in the same manner and they all exhibit zero shifts on those same tests, how does the "uncontrolled variables" argument hold when there are several scope models that reliably pass under the same conditions?

Worded another way, it seems to me like scope designs tend to either be around a 2-3 on an arbitrary 0-10 reliability scale or around a 8-9 and the "uncontrolled" nature of the RS drop eval might cause some 5-6 scopes to pass or fail depending on how the rifle bounces on any particular drop. Scopes that pass seem to consistently pass and ones that fail seem to consistently fail. Is the argument that there are more scopes in the 6-7 range than I think, and that 6-7 is good enough?

There have been a couple of recent interviews I've seen (Aaron Davidson on Cliff Gray's podcast for example) that have revisited the topic and discuss the evals with similar perspectives to yours but again don't address the setups that consistently pass the test. Aaron doesn't appear to be a guy who underthinks things, and neither are you (though please don't take that as me equating you with him). I'm really not trying for a "gotcha" moment here, I'm genuinely interested in your expertise. Your commentary on the topic has been interesting for me to read (along with @Glassaholic and some others) and I'd love to hear your perspective on this.
 
There have been a couple of recent interviews I've seen (Aaron Davidson on Cliff Gray's podcast for example) that have revisited the topic and discuss the evals with similar perspectives to yours but again don't address the setups that consistently pass the test. Aaron doesn't appear to be a guy who underthinks things
Aaron started off talking about it by saying the test doesn't control for a bunch of things it explicitly controls for. It didn't appear to me he that he has even a cursory knowledge of the testing process, regardless whether he agrees with the concept.
 
Copy. I owned one for a short while, and did not have it on a serious use gun. Turrets were not confidence inspiring for me (along with overall perceived build quality, very stiff mag ring in the cold, etc) so it went down the road. I didn't own it long enough to have any info one way or the other one long term durability/zero retention. LRHS is what it was going to replace if I liked it well enough, but it was not close IMO.

Edit to add - my LRHS and the LHT were fairly similar experience looking through them (though that was a couple years ago now so my memory of it isn't all that fresh). Apparent FOV is pretty similar I think, eye box is maybe a bit more generous on the LHT but not near enough to outweighs the feel/build and proven reliability of the Bushy.

Was not looking to argue, just saw Ilya address that topic here (or near enough) and thought it was relevant since those evals have shown issues on multiple copies of that scope.
 
Apparentl FOV looks way bigger to me on the LRHS. I imagine that is part of the reason it's 6-7 oz heavier.

I don't think I have ever messed with a scope that didn't get tight in the cold. It's kind of the nature of getting anything cold.

I don't see anything about the scope that makes me think it shouldn't cost around 1k new.

I don't know if I would go back to carrying the lrhs around simply due to the weight.

I just ran to the range last wekend to recheck zeros on diffrent ammo with my 280 and adjusting the zero offset I had on the box put them all on zero.
 
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I hesitate to open this can of worms, but I'm really interested in your opinion on a specific aspect of this. I haven't seen the proofing setup for the infamous Rokslide evals addressed (though it's tough to do an exhaustive search for all the conversations that happened a couple years ago when this was the hot topic of discussion). When they have a rifle bonded to a chassis, that reliably passes the evals with NF, SWFA, certain Maven and multiple Trijicon models (and a few others like older fixed Leupold, LRHS, S&B etc), wouldn't that seem to indicate that a scope can be built to withstand that kind of impact and that the eval does indeed reliably test for that level of robustness?

If multiple samples of a Leupold or Vortex scope get mounted in the same manner and they all exhibit zero shifts on those same tests, how does the "uncontrolled variables" argument hold when there are several scope models that reliably pass under the same conditions?

Worded another way, it seems to me like scope designs tend to either be around a 2-3 on an arbitrary 0-10 reliability scale or around a 8-9 and the "uncontrolled" nature of the RS drop eval might cause some 5-6 scopes to pass or fail depending on how the rifle bounces on any particular drop. Scopes that pass seem to consistently pass and ones that fail seem to consistently fail. Is the argument that there are more scopes in the 6-7 range than I think, and that 6-7 is good enough?

There have been a couple of recent interviews I've seen (Aaron Davidson on Cliff Gray's podcast for example) that have revisited the topic and discuss the evals with similar perspectives to yours but again don't address the setups that consistently pass the test. Aaron doesn't appear to be a guy who underthinks things, and neither are you (though please don't take that as me equating you with him). I'm really not trying for a "gotcha" moment here, I'm genuinely interested in your expertise. Your commentary on the topic has been interesting for me to read (along with @Glassaholic and some others) and I'd love to hear your perspective on this.
I have been out of the loop with this for a bit, so I have not looked at that silly nonsense for a little while.

I suspect that which scopes pass the alleged test and which do not mostly comes down to the preferences of the people doing the testing. The one observation I'll make is that with a few scopes from different manufacturers that they tested, they claimed one brand passed every time and another failed every time. The problem is that with a couple of those, I know for a fact that on the inside it is the same exact scope except with different branding. If one fails and the other does not... we are either dealing with sample variation or dishonesty.

Aside from that, I have made several attempts over the years to track down the issues with scopes that "allegedly" were shifting zero. I even offered to do the investigation pro-bono for people who believe they experience that problem. Exactly zero people took me up on that.

A few times I have been able to investigate someone else's scope (for people I know well or that are near me geographically), it was almost always something with the mount, although rifle bedding also played a role.

I even invited Scott Parks over to join me for a livestream and to discuss different failure modes.



While there are possibly riflescopes out there that do have small zero shifts out there, most of the time it will come down to improper mounting (not always, probably, but sufficiently seldom that I have not been able to track that down).

Small zero shifts are generally not consistent with how most riflescopes are designed. They usually either work or fail catastrophically.

As far as internet claims of all sorts go, I have sorta resigned myself that people lie. A lot. I do not know why.

A few years ago, I did a mini investigation where a gentleman I knew relatively well claimed that he has had at least one product from every product line at Vortex fail on him at least once and he finally gave up on Vortex. He claimed that he would get a replacement product, sell it and move onto something else. After some investigation, it turned out it was one product, a while back, Vortex did replace it and he did sell it. Somehow, it was like a fishing story. Every time he would tell the story, it was a larger number of products failing.

There is a Youtuber who claims that he had a particular company's product that was absolute garbage, so he sent it in and the replacement was much better. Cool story. He did two videos on it. Since I knew his name and the company, I dug into it. He sent a scope in. They cleaned a massive oil smudge off of the front of the objective lens. Did their usual QC checks on the collimator and sent it back to him. The Youtuber did get two videos out of it sounding very authoritative (every once in a while I check in on one of his videos to see if he learned anything about optics. Nope. Not a bloody thing. He still treats them like a video game).

I have a few more stories like this and they all end up the same way. I feel like the main character from House MD, who is always convinced that his patients are lying and is mostly right about it.

Every time I try to track this down, I find either bullshit or incompetence or some weird shenanigans or a combination of all three.

Does that mean that all reports of scopes shifting zero are bullshit? Not at all. There is only so much that I can investigate given the bandwidth that I have. However, until I can get some reasonable data otherwise. I am going to stick with what I know based on hundreds, if not thousands, of different scopes I have seen over the years and based on the fact that one of the things I do for my dayjob is build riflescope testers for riflescope manufacturers.

I will add that unless something really interesting pops up, I am done trying to investigate this. I have only so much time to spend on this.

ILya
 
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I have been out of the loop with this for a bit, so I have not looked at that silly nonsense for a little while.

I suspect that which scopes pass the alleged test and which do not mostly comes down to the preferences of the people doing the testing. The one observation I'll make is that with a few scopes from different manufacturers that they tested, they claimed one brand passed every time and another failed every time. The problem is that with a couple of those, I know for a fact that on the inside it is the same exact scope except with different branding. If one fails and the other does not... we are either dealing with sample variation or dishonesty.

Aside from that, I have made several attempts over the years to track down the issues with scopes that "allegedly" were shifting zero. I even offered to do the investigation pro-bono for people who believe they experience that problem. Exactly zero people took me up on that.

A few times I have been able to investigate someone else's scope (for people I know well or that are near me geographically), it was almost always something with the mount, although rifle bedding also played a role.

I even invited Scott Parks over to join me for a livestream and to discuss different failure modes.



While there are possibly riflescopes out there that do have small zero shifts out there, most of the time it will come down to improper mounting (not always, probably, but sufficiently seldom that I have not been able to track that down).

Small zero shifts are generally not consistent with how most riflescopes are designed. They usually either work or fail catastrophically.

As far as internet claims of all sorts go, I have sorta resigned myself that people lie. A lot. I do not know why.

A few years ago, I did a mini investigation where a gentleman I knew relatively well claimed that he has had at least one product from every product line at Vortex fail on him at least once and he finally gave up on Vortex. He claimed that he would get a replacement product, sell it and move onto something else. After some investigation, it turned out it was one product, a while back, Vortex did replace it and he did sell it. Somehow, it was like a fishing story. Every time he would tell the story, it was a larger number of products failing.

There is a Youtuber who claims that he had a particular company's product that was absolute garbage, so he sent it in and the replacement was much better. Cool story. He did two videos on it. Since I knew his name and the company, I dug into it. He sent a scope in. They cleaned a massive oil smudge off of the front of the objective lens. Did their usual QC checks on the collimator and sent it back to him. The Youtuber did get two videos out of it sounding very authoritative (every once in a while I check in on one of his videos to see if he learned anything about optics. Nope. Not a bloody thing. He still treats them like a video game).

I have a few more stories like this and they all end up the same way. I feel like the main character from House MD, who is always convinced that his patients are lying and is mostly right about it.

Every time I try to track this down, I find either bullshit or incompetence or some weird shenanigans or a combination of all three.

Does that mean that all reports of scopes shifting zero are bullshit? Not at all. There is only so much that I can investigate given the bandwidth that I have. However, until I can get some reasonable data otherwise. I am going to stick with what I know based on hundreds, if not thousands, of different scopes I have seen over the years and based on the fact that one of the things I do for my dayjob is build riflescope testers for riflescope manufacturers.

I will add that unless something really interesting pops up, I am done trying to investigate this. I have only so much time to spend on this.

ILya

Which two brands are exactly the same scope?
 
Maven and Tract
I'm a bit confused, which Tract? I just looked through the droptests and the only Tract they've done is a 3-15x50 which is a 5x erector ratio (it failed yes). But the only Maven they've done that has a 5x erector ratio failed the test too. If you're comparing it to the RS1.2 how could they have the same internals if the erector ratio isn't the same and the objectives aren't either?
 
I'm a bit confused, which Tract? I just looked through the droptests and the only Tract they've done is a 3-15x50 which is a 5x erector ratio (it failed yes). But the only Maven they've done that has a 5x erector ratio failed the test too. If you're comparing it to the RS1.2 how could they have the same internals if the erector ratio isn't the same and the objectives aren't either?
The 2.5-15x44 models.