January 08, 2020, 06:22 PM
kyoungBrownells MPO scope???
anybody had any experience with these scopes? they look good!
January 09, 2020, 07:49 AM
RHINOWSOI think they just released them, I had never seen them before on their website (and I order nearly all my stuff from Brownells).
Japanese construction, nice qualities, and covered by Brownells "Forever Warranty", which includes "I don't want it anymore", so there seems to be little risk in trying it out. A tab heavier than some, but not overly so.
I just bought a Nightforce, so my gun money and scope needs are tapped out otherwise I would consider it more strongly.
January 11, 2020, 08:43 PM
jjkroll32On the outside, they look solid.
I certainly agree with Rhino's second paragraph. Especially since Brownell's isn't going anywhere and if in 10 years it poops the bed, they'll take care of their customer.
Might find a home on an SPR build in the future, with the 18x version.
January 12, 2020, 07:20 AM
kyoungI got to really looking at the 5x25 it only had 22 mils adjustment that wont get it shooting LRP with a 308. I ordered a Burris Xtreme 2x25 has 90 mil
January 12, 2020, 09:40 AM
fritzquote:
Originally posted by kyoung:
I got to really looking at the 5x25 it only had 22 mils adjustment that wont get it shooting LRP with a 308. I ordered a Burris Xtreme 2x25 has 90 mil
If I have the correct scopes and specs, let me discuss a few points.
I know nothing of the Brownells MPO scope. The 5-25's max elevation adjustment is 22 mils, which translates to 75 MOA.
I have briefly shot a Burris XTR II 5-25 scope at a rifle match demo. I don't think Burris makes a 2-25x scope. IMO the Burris 5-25x is a good scope -- bright & clear glass, nice turret feel. The 5-25x max elevation adjustment is 90
MOA, not 90
mils. The Burris' 90 MOA translates to 26 mils. Therefore the Burris has 15 MOA (or 4 mils) more elevation adjustment than the Brownells. Not a huge difference, but a noticeable difference.
If you don't use a canted base or scope mount, you will be able to use only 1/2 of a scope's max elevation adjustment. Less maybe 2-3 MOA to obtain a zero at 100 yards. This means with the Burris you have about 42 MOA of adjustment before the elevation turret bottoms out. My 308, using FGMM 175 at 5,000 feet Density Altitude requires the following elevations:
19 MOA at 700 yards
24 MOA at 800 yards
29 MOA at 900 yards
35 MOA at 1000 yards
You likely will be fine without a canted base. However, if you intend to regularly shoot at 500+ yards, a 10 MOA or 20 MOA base will help to keep you looking through the center of the scope lens -- which improves scope clarity.
I think you made a wise choice going with the Burris instead of the Brownells.