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| My goto's are the Leupold 4x rimfire, the 3-9 rimfire and the 2-7 rimfire depending on how much money I want in the deal and the use.
“So in war, the way is to avoid what is strong, and strike at what is weak.”
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| I've had good results with a Simmons 3-9x32, UTG Bugbuster 3-9x32, Nikon P-Rimfire 2-7x32, and Vortex Crossfire II 2-7x32. My favorite is the Nikon and the Vortex but the Simmons and UTG get the job done. |
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| I have a vortex cross fire 2-7 rimfire on my 10/22 and a diamondback 4-12 ao ion my cz. Both are great. Only downside is no additional dots for holdovers.
"Modern medicine exists to defeat Darwinism" - Anonymous 18D
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| Posts: 712 | Location: Land of Scarlet and Gray | Registered: October 01, 2009 |
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| No budget, no distance, no recommendation. |
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| quote: Originally posted by NikonUser: No budget, no distance, no recommendation.
+1.
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| < $300 50-150 yds
"Everybody wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die." Joe Louis
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| Posts: 591 | Location: Idaho | Registered: January 17, 2012 |
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| Excellent. I would suggest strongly that you get a scope with an adjustable objective or a side focus. One inch tube is fine. I looked at swfa.com for under $350 from Burris, Nikon, Leupold, Vortex, Weaver, Bushnell, Redfield and similar and got a bunch. Make sure there is an AO or an SF and they will all work fine for you. When you narrow down to magnification range and brand, we can talk furter. |
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| OMG, there are a ba-jillion scopes in the < $300 range, and within a given brand there are a ton. Is it wise to go with one designated as a rimfire scope? I'm thinking 3-9 variable; Nikon, Leupold or Vortex?
"Everybody wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die." Joe Louis
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| Posts: 591 | Location: Idaho | Registered: January 17, 2012 |
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| You're so funny. You don't want to look through all those, you just wanted us to do that for you. :big_grin:
Here's the thing. A rimfire scope is essentially one that is focused at 60 to 75 yards instead of the usual 100-150 yards used by the other scopes.
Since you specified that you were going from 50 to 150, I strongly suggested that you get a scope with an adjustable objective or a side focus. What these things do is they will allow you to focus precisely on your target and thus eliminate parallax, placing you way ahead of the game.
If you had said something like shooting at 100 yards all the time, an AO or SF would not really be required.
I strongly recommend that you go through the riflescope primer thread on this site, to get a quick understanding of the various parts of a riflescope.
I do not have a .17 HMR or anything in that caliber, but I have read that they can be very accurate further out than an .22LR. If you were to pick a .17, I would suggest that you get a riflescope with a top end in the 10s, like 12, 15 or 16. You could have a lot of fun with that combo.
Nikon, Leupold, Burris or Vortex should have something that would work just fine. |
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| quote: Originally posted by NikonUser: Excellent. I would suggest strongly that you get a scope with an adjustable objective or a side focus. One inch tube is fine. I looked at swfa.com for under $350 from Burris, Nikon, Leupold, Vortex, Weaver, Bushnell, Redfield and similar and got a bunch. Make sure there is an AO or an SF and they will all work fine for you. When you narrow down to magnification range and brand, we can talk furter.
NikonUser: now reading your EXCELLENT post series on scopes! VERY informative...thank you for putting it together!
"Everybody wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die." Joe Louis
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| Posts: 591 | Location: Idaho | Registered: January 17, 2012 |
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| "You're so funny. You don't want to look through all those, you just wanted us to do that for you." GUILTY I'd say, but moreover, trying not to reinvent the wheel if you will. With all the knowledge on this forum, I thought input from experienced users would be extremely valuable and keep me from being overwhelmed by the choices for my meager needs. As I said, I just found your tutorial and I am busy studying it!
"Everybody wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die." Joe Louis
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| Posts: 591 | Location: Idaho | Registered: January 17, 2012 |
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| Back to swfa.com and I see a Nikon 3-9X40 ProStaff Target EFR Rimfire with adjustable objective for $187. NIK6734.
A Weaver 6.5-20X44 with adjustable objective for $195. 849550 The 849552 is $200, different reticle.
A Weaver 3-12X44 Kaspa Tactical with a side focus for $225. WEA849781.
A Nikon 3.5-14X40 Prostaff 5 with side focus for $297. NIK6740. NIK6743 has mil-dot reticle.
Weaver has a few more just above $300.
I have 2 Weavers T-36, fixed power scope 36X40. They have adjustable objectives. They served me well shooting F-class years ago. I LOVE the Weaver Micro Trac knobs; they are great for knob twirlers like me. |
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| This is what this forum is all about. I'm happy to share my meagre knowledge with anyone who can endure it.
There are lots of knowledgeable people here who will help in refining the parameters and guide you to a good decision. |
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| quote: Originally posted by NikonUser: This is what this forum is all about. I'm happy to share my meagre knowledge with anyone who can endure it.
There are lots of knowledgeable people here who will help in refining the parameters and guide you to a good decision.
Thank you sir, and I believe you to be overly modest and humble concerning your expertise and ability to explain in an easy to understand manner. I look forward to reading more of your comments!
"Everybody wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die." Joe Louis
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| Posts: 591 | Location: Idaho | Registered: January 17, 2012 |
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| Depending how how small of groups you wish to shoot in the 100+ range will go a long way towards determining a max power. I'm a Vortex guy and LOVE what my Diamondback HP 3-12x42 does up to 100 yds. It's clear and useful much farther than that and with it sitting on a .223 out to 400+ with appropriate sized big targets at the CMP it works fine. Fine target work...NOPE. On my .17 HMR I have a similar Vortex Viper and don't like it as much as the HP. When doing fine target work with my .22, or the .17, I bolt on my Mueller 8-32 target scope. It most certainly isn't something I'd use in the field, but I can read the copyright symbol on the target fineprint. I fully agree with the AO requirement and that's fairly common in the range you are looking at. It still comes down to, do you want a general purpose scope, a fast critter scope or "I want to shoot the smallest holes at 50+ yds I can" scope. Based on what you wrote it sounds like you are looking for a good general purpose scope, I'd suggest something in the max zoom of 9x to 16x. I find a 12x as a nice middle ground.
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