Swarovski btx vs 15x binos

amork

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 10, 2014
Messages
181
Location
montana
So recently I purchased a Swarovski atx 65 spotter to upgrade my glass for mainly western hunting/spotting long range impacts target shooting. I love the scope but don't really have anything to compare it too, I had an old Nikon so this is night and day better. One thing I struggle with is my vision, I've kind of gotten used to it but if I can get the right equipment to make it better I do.For me with the spotter, I struggle finding anything unless I find it with bino's first. I was looking at either selling the atx for a btx or I've got a few rifles I don't shoot anymore than could be thinned to purchase it. Would it make more sense for say solely spotting deer/elk to run a btx along with quality 8 or 10x binos or go with a pair of quality 15x binos? I currently have some vortex uhd 10x42 binos that are decent but sadly I've looked through a lot of glass cheaper that seemed better.
 
I would personally get the binos. The BTX just isn't that realistic of a tool IMO. It's far too magnified for moderate distances out to say 1500 yards. Then beyond that, where it excels, you can see animal figures out to crazy yardages, but can't see whether they're good enough to go after sometimes because it's a fixed 30X.
 
Huntnful covered it pretty well. The BTX has a distance where it really excels but the other 80% of the time it's just a real heavy weight in your pack. When you can really put it to use it's an awesome tool but it's pretty specialized.

I feel like top notch 10's or 12x binos with a tripod adapter are kinda the foundation of a good glassing setup. Now that tons of guys are jumping to NL Pures there are some deals out there on SV EL's in both 10's and 12's and those won't really leave a guy wanting (as long as you don't look thru a pair of NL's lol).

15's are sweet for a lot of different terrain but they are starting to get a little specialized and they suck to handhold. And they aren't light. I feel like 12's are a good compromise for all arounders if you do lots of tripod glassing but you can also handhold them when needed.
 
Thanks for the info! I think that is where I'll lean toward is some better binos, maybe upgrade the tripod. I've already made the mistake of looking at the nl's but I think I could survive with the el's! Boy they sure are nice though.
 
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