The magnification settings are laser-engraved on the tube just forward of the power ring, and the knurled ring has a flat cut in it with a red indicator mark for the power setting. Travel of the power rig was smooth and even, and for those who eschew power adjustment, you can lock it via an Allen screw on the ring. You can adjust focus downrange by turning the ocular in or out and then lock it with a set ring between the ocular’s front and the power ring once you hit the sweet spot. It’s called the Rapid Target Acquisition Eyepiece, which sounds much sexier than ocular lens housing. Not Your Father’s Accu-Range Redfield On The Range & Afield The 2-7X compact on top of a Savage 220 in 20 gauge held up well to the 1-ounce Winchester AccuBond slugs, although I must admit I was completely and totally uninterested in checking the mechanical repeatability of the scope with even 20-ga. slugs from the bench. The scope took the pounding from 35 slugs without shift in zero in practice and zeroing. Managing Editor Aaron Carter later used the same rig to hunt white-tailed deer in Virginia. The zero after two airplane rides and some rough handling remained dead on as I passed both gun and scope on to Carter. I mounted a separate Revolution 3-9X 40 mm on the Kimber Model 84L rifle in .30-’06 Sprg. For that task, I ran the scope, which measures 11-inches long and weighs 11.1 ounces, through a series of tests, including immersion in 110-degree water for 10 minutes and an overnight trip to the freezer; no bubbles, no internal fogging. Using high Leupold rotary dovetail rings, I mounted the Redfield 3-9X 50 mm on my Remington Model 504 in .22 Long Rifle, a rifle of known accuracy. Using Federal 40-grain Gold Medal Match, I fired a three–shot group once zeroed at 100 yards, then moved the crosshair eight clicks up and eight clicks right and fired three more shots. I then went down 16 clicks, fired a group, and then over 16 clicks left and fired another. I moved up 16 clicks, fired three shots, then moved eight right and eight down for the final three shots. This is an accurate rifle, and all the groups were tight, but the final three shots dropped into the same ragged hole formed by the first three, making the first indistinguishable from the last. The corners of the groups of the “square,” center-to-center, measured from 3.97 to 4.14 inches, which is only slightly larger than the 4 m.o.a. represented by the click adjustments, and well within the margin of bullet diameter. A Part Of A Plan When I asked York about the Wideview, he tried to stay deadpan, but just grinned as he said, “Everything’s on the table.”
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