Jump to content

What scope should I get?


Benji02
 Share

Recommended Posts

Hello, I am looking to buy a new scope for my hw100tk .22 and would like some opinions, I have around £250 and I'm after 4-12x50 or 4-16x50 ect... Anyone know of any decent scopes for that price range? I will be using it for hunting and the occasional target shooting but mainly hunting.

Thanks in advance

Alex

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If it is mainly for hunting I would be looking for something starting at 3 x magnification , especially if you are planning on doing some lamping or rat shooting .

 

You will able to pick up a higher end hawke and I would suggest the Airmax 30 3-12 x 50 this also has half mill dots on the bottom post so will give more aim points for target shooting

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think the sidewinder is slightly out of my price range but. The air max is defiantly an option, are they good scopes? Also so 4-16 wouldn't be sufficient? I have had 3-9 on my last 2 rifles and never really used 3 mag so would getting the AirMax 30 in 4-12x50 be ok?

Thanks for the quick replies :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

personally I cant see the point of having a bigger mag than 3x9 on any air rifle unless you are doing some serious comp target work, the hawke Panorama EV 3x9x50 AO IR is a superb scope for the money and more than enough magnification for air rifle use,

 

for around the £120 mark it is a top piece of glass and certainly more than adequate for ANY air rifle, they are also superb on a .22rf as well and work very well in low light conditions,

 

hope this helps

 

atb Evo

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had a 4-16x50 scope for a while. I found myself needing 3x far more than I ever expected, so traded it for a Hawke Sidewinder 3-12. much happier now! That said, where i missed the 3x most was close quarter rats/corvid work. if you don't do much of this, then you'd probably be okay with 4x. The new Airmax looks pretty good. It hadn't been released when I bought my Sidewinder; I think I would have had a harder choice had it been available.

Edited by chrisjpainter
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thankyou everyone for the replies! I don't do much rat shooting atall really and I really don't like the 3-9 not high enough mag to what I like, I'll probably go for the 4-16 or 3-12 not sure yet!! also just a quick question when zeroing I have had various different opinions from people but should I use full zoom when zeroing or not? Iv had some people tell me full zoom, some tell me no zoom and others say in the middle so am not 100% sure

Many thanks

Alex

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Zero how you feel comfortable to. If its a calibrated mil dot scope then set it to cal zoom level so you can use the mil dots to make accurate adjustments. If you download chairgun pro, its free, it will tell you optimum zero range for your setup which does make a real difference when intersects are viewed. Also search for a vid of one shot zero and see what they like to use. Logically different zoom depending on zero distance for me.

Edited by onatangent
Link to comment
Share on other sites

personally I cant see the point of having a bigger mag than 3x9 on any air rifle unless you are doing some serious comp target work, the hawke Panorama EV 3x9x50 AO IR is a superb scope for the money and more than enough magnification for air rifle use,

 

for around the £120 mark it is a top piece of glass and certainly more than adequate for ANY air rifle, they are also superb on a .22rf as well and work very well in low light conditions,

 

hope this helps

 

atb Evo

+1 on this one. I bought a Panorama ev 3-9x40 ao ir to sit on my new 77k. Like you say does everything you could possibly want from a scope for air gunning. I went for the MAP reticle. I like the way the reticle is suspended and the illumination comes in handy. My shooting buddie uses the same scope on his 22lr as well. I also can not get my head round the fact that many want the highest mag possible from a scope for air gunning. Specialist field target shooting maybe but for the majority of times you are shooting at no more than 30 yards. I have raised this point many times at our club with fellow air gunners and mention that when shooting my 243 i have the mag set at 6x. Same with both my rimfires.

Whatever floats you boat i suppose but i would certainly have a look through the Panorama range before making a final decision :yes:

ATB,

Pat

Link to comment
Share on other sites

personally I cant see the point of having a bigger mag than 3x9 on any air rifle unless you are doing some serious comp target work, the hawke Panorama EV 3x9x50 AO IR is a superb scope for the money and more than enough magnification for air rifle use,

 

for around the £120 mark it is a top piece of glass and certainly more than adequate for ANY air rifle, they are also superb on a .22rf as well and work very well in low light conditions,

 

hope this helps

 

atb Evo

 

For advice that pretty much says it.

 

Whilst many seem to use the likes of the Sidewinder, I personally think they can be a bit heavy for an air rifle.

 

In #17 you say I personally like a slightly higher mag for when I do abit of target shooting and zeroing, I also love the AirMax reticle, so you appear to have some personal ideas already.

 

Price wise, obviously spend what you like, but don't be hoodwinked into thinking you have to spend loads of money on an air rifle scope to get good results!

 

:good:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Whilst many seem to use the likes of the Sidewinder, I personally think they can be a bit heavy for an air rifle.

This is true, it is a bit on the weighty side. But the baby one (3-12x50) is 6.6oz lighter than the equivalent Airmax30 model. Obviously it's still a heavyweight compared to a 1" tube scope like the panorama ev. The big reason I went for the Sidewinder was the side focus. I much prefer it to the AO models. If that's not an issue, then the Panorama ev is probably the best on the market.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't want to teach you guys to suck eggs and I am new to the forum but I have shot fire arms and air gun for years. Scope choice is a personal thing and even though I very much agree the side winder is a very good scope I would have a look at FFP (first focal plane) scopes because if you use the zoom on you scope through the full range you zero never changes due to the magnificent and FFP scopes are becoming more affordable

 

Glynn

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't want to teach you guys to suck eggs and I am new to the forum but I have shot fire arms and air gun for years. Scope choice is a personal thing and even though I very much agree the side winder is a very good scope I would have a look at FFP (first focal plane) scopes because if you use the zoom on you scope through the full range you zero never changes due to the magnificent and FFP scopes are becoming more affordable

 

Glynn

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't want to teach you guys to suck eggs and I am new to the forum but I have shot fire arms and air gun for years. Scope choice is a personal thing and even though I very much agree the side winder is a very good scope I would have a look at FFP (first focal plane) scopes because if you use the zoom on you scope through the full range you zero never changes due to the magnificent and FFP scopes are becoming more affordable

 

Glynn

What's the difference in ffp and sfp I know it's where the retical is positioned but what's the pros and cons of both? I shoot small game rabbits, pigions, crows, magpies, rats ect.. At a distance of 10-40 yards mostly

Edited by Benji02
Link to comment
Share on other sites

As you zoom in on a second focal plane scope the aim point changes because the reticle is not magnifyed. So as your target appears larger the more you zoom in the distance between the aim points, mils MOA doesn't change. So if you look at FFP scopes the cross and mils get larger the more you zoom so your adjustment for hold over, under and wind never change no matter what your zoom. Also makes making you range card essay and makes you more confident on shot placement

 

Glynn

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Glynn

 

Where do you stop..you can go on and on with scopes, the reality is its a HW100 used mainly for hunting (no mention of FAC) so just how far is he going to be shooting?

 

Obviously anyone can spend whatever they want, but I don't spend anything like £250 on my rimfire scopes, and they all serve me well, if they didn't I would spend whatever needed spending to get something that did work, the fact is you don't need to spend a fortune on scopes these days...even for centrefires!

 

:good:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...