Originally Posted by BobbyTomek
Originally Posted by FTR_Shooter
...but you would probably not be using high magnification at night.

Actually, that's a common misconception. Most of my moonlight shots are at 8-10x and sometimes higher. You need magnification to discern detail at night. For example, a 150 or 175 yard shot on a hog in daylight is a piece of cake with 3x or 4x. But at night, you'd have an extremely difficult time at those lower magnifications and likely couldn't tell for certain if the animal was broadside, quartering, etc. -- or even if it's a hog at all and not a dog or calf.

This. I recently shot a hog on a feeder at 50 yards in very low light. Several hogs were jostling each other at the feeder and while I could see all of them at 3x, I couldn't really understand what was going on: which hog was in front of the others, etc. I cranked my Nightforce 3-10x42 SHV up to about 6-7x and was able to see what was important.

Had the hogs been any farther, I would have cranked the scope up even more.


Okie John


Originally Posted by Brad
If Montana had a standing army, a 270 Win with Federal Blue Box 130's would be the standard issue.