Nature Boy
Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2015
- Messages
- 8,276
I've shot the vast majority of my deer.....
Well, I've shot the vast majority of my deer with iron sights. Talk about chintzing out!
I've shot the vast majority of my deer.....
Well, I've shot the vast majority of my deer with iron sights. Talk about chintzing out!
Tsk tsk tsk! Meprolight is the way to go after dusk. Accept no substitutes. There's no chance a gun equipped with Trijicon or, heaven forbid, shop brand generic irons would kill anything even at a contact shot.If they weren't Trijicon Iron Sights, you were doing the animals a disservice.
Mele Stock is here!View attachment 964663 I bought my second Sightron for my KIDD SuperGrade 10-22. First one was their S-Tac 4x20x50 with 30mm tube. Replaced it with this little SVSS 10X50X60 with 34 mm tube.View attachment 964663 Having Tony Mele build a stock for it. Should be here soon,after bedding/fitting.
Mediocre scopes after sunset offer a fantastic opportunity to make their devoted user an exceptionally seasoned and experienced tracker in the long run. Like I already said, whatever floats your boat. Good luck.
Of course. You do realize that the "mediocre scopes" anecdote concerned his claim that his Revolution scopes do the exact same thing. Personally I'd put any Meopta, even a Meopro, to pretty much the opposite end of spectrum compared to Redfields and would be hard pressed to substitute any Meopta with one in anything less than optimal shooting conditions. Simply owning something doesn't constitute perspective or insight by default, otherwise every rap star with a Lamborghini would instantly be Mario Andretti. Well, Paul Newman was a notable exception; not by owning high-end equipment but using it at its very limits for years on end and gaining invaluable first hand experience of how everything behaves in real life.You do realize "dranrab" in post # 312 mentioned he has Meopro...Meopta are usually very good in low light.
Of course. You do realize that the "mediocre scopes" anecdote concerned his claim that his Revolution scopes do the exact same thing. Personally I'd put any Meopta, even a Meopro, to pretty much the opposite end of spectrum compared to Redfields and would be hard pressed to substitute any Meopta with one in anything less than optimal shooting conditions. Simply owning something doesn't constitute perspective or insight by default, otherwise every rap star with a Lamborghini would instantly be Mario Andretti. Well, Paul Newman was a notable exception; not by owning high-end equipment but using it at its very limits for years on end and gaining invaluable first hand experience of how everything behaves in real life.
That is exactly what I pointed out.Yes that was the other 1/2 of the line I omitted, so long as Dan sticks with the Meopta's in low light he is fine.
That is exactly what I pointed out.