My .300 Win needs a new scope, I’m thinking about the Sig options, what has served you well on these?
What states prohibit the use?Is there a certain reason you’re looking at the Sig’s? I know the ones that Bluetooth to the rangefinder aren’t legal in all the states.
Idaho for sure. Oregon may be another, but I’d have to re-read the rules to be 100%. I think there was an article about New Mexico or Arizona prohibiting them also.What states prohibit the use?
I put a Leupold Freedom on my .22 and am totally satisfied with it. It is a reasonably priced scope with good optics, but I certainly would upgrade to the III's for a hunting rifle.I'm there same boat, except for my daughter's rifle. Debating on just putting a Leupold VX-Freedom on her gun, or giving her my VX-3 3.5x10 and getting a VX-3 4.5x14 with ballistics dial for my gun.
Figure I'm already half way there with the Freedom, might as well spend a little more and we both get great scopes.
Be interesting to see that info listed in the members only section when doing state breakdownsIdaho for sure. Oregon may be another, but I’d have to re-read the rules to be 100%. I think there was an article about New Mexico or Arizona prohibiting them also.
My daughter's rifle is a wood stock .243, so fairly low recoil, but I think I'm just going to spend the extra money.I put a Leupold Freedom on my .22 and am totally satisfied with it. It is a reasonably priced scope with good optics, but I certainly would upgrade to the III's for a hunting rifle.
I had a outfitter friend who said that he hated to see a client show up with a Swarvoski scope on his rifle. He said that they make fantastic optics but their scopes leave a lot to be desired in the sturdiness department. He had seen too many of them take unrepeatable damage while hunting in the hills after they had banged a tree, rock, or if the rifle had fallen onto the ground. His favorite scope was Leopold.swarvorski makes some nice optics.