ejones338
Well-Known Member
I did however forget to add that a swaro scope was not present.
A good scope CANNOT fix mirage or haze, only magnify it. The conundrum is that your added resolution from a premium scope affects everything including haze and mirage and you are using premium optics to bring out these issues even more.
Michael, you make some points well worth considering and in doing so, I wonder if you share a bit more of your thoughts about spotters as I too have a Swaro that I'm not all that pleased with. Anyone else with ideas or recommendations I'd appreciate your advice too.
My dissappointment doesnt stem from my Swaro doing less in comparison to another scope, but is due to exactly what you state a good scope CANNOT handle. I have the STS 65 which I bought because (just like B23, I loved my EL's!) and because it was sort of a step up but not all the way to a big scope, and I might want to pack it up the hill after some sheep or goats someday. Anyway, I have the 20 to 60 variable eyepiece on it, and I generally cant see squat with it past 30 power or so. In the bright of day its hazy, in the late afternoon, early evening it is too. I thought I understood the world of optics from studying rifle scopes and binoculars, but is there something I'm missing here? Is it truly impossible to magnify that much and not distort. Maybe I should buy a 75 or 80mm scope with a 45x zoom for more clarity? Anyway, I'm rambling so I guess I'll get right to the heart of the matter before I confuse my question even more.... what combination of scope size and power would you say will best magnify to the max, yet give clarity? Will the newer coatings give better haze conquering capabilities? How come my binos let me see better in the haze? At what point of magnification does the haze become insurmountable for modern optics?
I apologize for hijacking like this, but I guess it sort of ties in to this topic because I too am unhappy with mine, I just wonder if I went for the wrong combination to get the performance I wanted out of my scope in the first place.
THanks, Chris
223 dude:
I wonder how the 80 with the 30 wide would compare to an 80 with a 20-60 set on 30?
I have the STS 80HD 20-60. I know that the field of view shrinks and imperfections (i.e. mirage, haze, etc.) will be magnified at higher powers. Most of the time I'm using it at 20x-30x, and only if the conditions allow, AND what I'm looking at allows a higher magnification do I turn it up. Personally, I like the flexability of the variable eyepiece. But, that's the nice thing about the Swaro's. You can buy different eyepieces and use the same body. During the past Antelope hunt, I cannot tell you how many miles of walking that spotter saved us.
Chris:
I'll bet the spotter will do just as well in haze as the binoculars IF the power of the two were the same. There's a reason why they don't sell many binoculars over 15x.