highfinblue
Well-Known Member
I haven't bought a new scope in a few years so, I'm not up to snuff on the latest and greatest, but I've been buying them for forty years and I can tell you this. Every time I've sent a Leupold in for service I had it back at my house in a week or so, no questions asked, and a time or two they probably should have. Horses, four wheelers and rugged terrain can be tough on equipment. Burris has always taken a LONG time, up to six months. I own a really good pair of binocs from them that cost $600 bucks decades ago, and they are still decent glass, but a couple of times I've sent them in to be cleaned and replace a small part that keeps falling off, and it just takes too much time in my opinion, but it is impressive they still fix them for free after close to forty years. I have not shot many Vortex scopes, but in my opinion, they do not compare with NF or even a Leupold that costs $1000. NF has never been tested on service, I've never had one of their scopes fail in any way. They are heavy, but the first time I looked through one was one of the costliest mistakes I ever made because I started buying them. One of the best shots that I have ever known used to run the best gun shop in this area. I bought all my stuff from him as he is a super guy, great stuff, great prices; he told me buy the very best glass you can afford because you cannot hit what you cannot see. With the tripods and bipods available nowadays it's not that hard to get still, and clear glass with good magnification makes seemingly impossible shots very makeable. Even if you have to save a bit longer to put a few more Benjamen's together don't cut yourself short on glass.