







S**.
The jury is still out.
Of course, the reason for buying this is cost and features. It's a cheap scope. Accept that and set your expectations accordingly. First problem I had was that my 11mm weaver mounts wouldn't work because they were split into two pieces (intended for a pair of rings). I had to buy a different mount for my rifle. I didn't realize the mount itself was integrated (yeah, I should've noticed that), so I got the rifle all leveled and ready to level the scope... when I realized the integrated mount prevents leveling the scope separately. If your mounts are a little off-kilter, the scope will be too. That said, the scope did mount very close to what my gear said would be level. At the distances I intend to use this, I don't expect to notice much of a difference. Once mounted, I laser-bore-sighted it and noticed I had to make significant changes from factory zero to bore-sighted zero. This concerns me about how much I'll be able to adjust it for elevation. We shall see on my first trip to the range, I guess. The eye relief is minimal. Much closer and you'd have to worry about getting a black eye if your rifle kicks much.I wanted a tactical scope where you can adjust elevation and windage without removing the caps. My limited experience with tactical scopes led me to believe this one was that way. It is not. Yes, a more thorough look at the pics would've told me this. There are external controls to adjust elevation but not windage. Again, I can deal with that. It's not like I'm taking this out for long-range shooting on a high-powered rifle. The internal windage control is a little odd. I'll have to investigate that more. The elevation is controlled by an internal and external control. The internal one, for zeroing the rifle, is adjustable by hand, without tools. I did not see any way to lock it in place, so the cap is your only defense against mis-adjustment. The external control has just five (5) positions, numbered 1-5, and it's supposed to represent the distance to target (x100yds). This can NOT be accurate because it does not know anything about the rifle or round being fired. At least with a military surplus rifles' range-setting on iron sights, the rifle was designed to work with one specific round, so you could feel a little more comfortable with the distance values as labeled. Still, I hope this will be useful since the bullet I'm shooting is rather slow and will have significant drop at the longest distance I intend to shoot. I expect to have to label each elevation setting for the distance at which it actually aligns.The other main reason for getting this is to test out the laser. The kids like that option and this is intended for their rifle. Of course, they also like the illuminated reticle. I've never hunted with one but have had to let a decent buck go because I couldn't find the crosshairs in my scope. This isn't going on a hunting rifle, though, so it's just another bell/whistle to me. There are six intensity levels and two colors (red/green). The brightest one is mighty bright and the dimmest one just barely lights up the reticle. On the brightest level, you can barely see the mil dots for the distortions the bright light imparts.This brings up my concern over the mil dots. They are mighty small, close, and few. They do not zoom in with the magnification (common) but I'm not sure at which power they are actually a mil apart. The manual provided was of no help as it was devoid of information regarding THIS scope, and just contained info about scopes in general. Perhaps I have the wrong manual? While it would be nice to know this information, I don't expect the kids would use it properly anyway. I expect they'll dial the scope up to maximum magnification and then use the dots as secondary crosshairs for different distances. To that effect, it would be REALLY helpful if there were more dots. Most of the reticle is just black-bar. There are just a few dots on each radian of the crosshairs.So yes, the jury's still out on it, but I understand you get what you pay for, and this had a cheap price tag. I hope it'll do well on a plinker, but I wouldn't bet my life (or that buck's) on it by using it on a hunting rifle.
F**Y
Great for small calibers
The scope is great when used on small caliber rifles, like a 22. On a larger rifle the recoil will make the accuracy diminish. So if you are looking for a scope for your 7MM or 308, not the best choice. for a 17 HMR or 22, it is great.
O**N
Bring your target closer
Great little scope for the AR-15 AR10 enthusiast, full of features and great magnification. Can't loose with this one, the only regret is that is a little heavy and the nuts tend to loosen up unless you put a antic ceasing agent like lok tight and the scope shields are made out of brittle plastic that tend to break easily. But considering the price and the good customer care, you can't loose with this one.
R**S
budget build
Arrived today and was pleased considering it came from China, which I was disappointed to find out after I order it. Appears to be well constructed first thing though I did not use the cheap batteries that came with it bought some from interstate batteries. But did to test it out, everything worked fine. Still have my doubts but hope to be proven wrong, will sight it in and run a few dozen rounds though for an update....
M**L
Great scope, great price! Excellent seller!
This seller provides quality products at outstanding prices. This particular rifle scope is an excellent value for the price.
R**L
Not bad for the price
Not too bad for the cost,laser can't be seen very far awayGood for plinking,but if your a serious shooter spend a little more for good quality
A**R
Looks like a nice scope but no manual were do the ...
Looks like a nice scope but no manual were do the batteries go and setting?????
A**A
Four Stars
Great Scope for the price. I put it on my Marlin 30-30.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 week ago