Does anyone have any opinions on trijicon scopes? How do they compare to leupold and vortex?
Which Trijicon vs which Vortex and Leupold? All three makes make several levels of scopes.
Accupoint 2.5x10x56 vs
Vortex viper,
Vortex razor
Leupold 5hd
How does a $780 trificon stack up?
Well, according to europtic the trijicon is more like $650.....
Would you hit it?
The last four scopes I bought were Trijicons; two Accupoint 3-9x40, one Credo HX 2.5-10x56, and one Credo HX 1-6x24.
I like them. Don’t dial with the rifles they’re on, but pretty sure I could at need. Excellent quality for the price IMO. Good reticles for their intended use.
I don't know how they compare, but my next scope will be a Trijicon.
The last four scopes I bought were Trijicons; two Accupoint 3-9x40, one Credo HX 2.5-10x56, and one Credo HX 1-6x24.
I like them. Don’t dial with the rifles they’re on, but pretty sure I could at need. Excellent quality for the price IMO. Good reticles for their intended use.
How bright is the illumination on the Credo HX 1-6x24? Is it daylight usable?
Just looked out the window with mine (15:00). It’s cloudy bright and at setting 6 (of 10) I can clearly see the red dot against the grass and the Western sky. Lots more on tap. Mine has the Hunter Holds Sport reticle. Right now, 5 is good in the shade.
Can’t hardly believe the vortex was asked in the same breath as a leupold good advertising I guess
Everyone I know personally had them fail
The running joke I if you buy vortex the come with a great warranty... your gona need it!!!
Never bothered trying one myself. If I buy a scope it must be usa made. A few of scopes came to me on used guns and have been fine bu anything I hunt with has a gold ring on it
This past weekend I zeroed two new Trijicon scopes, a 2.5-15x42 Credo on my Cooper 92 280AI and a Tenmile 4-24x50 on a Bergara B14 Ridge. Both adjusted spot on. Will stretch their legs to 500 and back in a couple weeks.
Does anyone have any opinions on trijicon scopes? How do they compare to leupold and vortex?
I have a Trijicon Credo 34mm 1-8x mil-mil on an AR. It's heavy but a great fit for what I do.
I've owned Trijicons every model for over 15 years have never had a problem with any of them have never sent one for repair.....most are on large bore rifles.....
All my Leopold's have been sent down the road....got tired sending 3-6 a year to get repaired......
The only Trigicon I have any experience with is a 1-4x24 Huron which I put on a Ruger MPR.
I find the glass to be excellent. Clicks are positive, and it holds zero while bouncing around in the truck and SXS. I like the simplicity of the reticle also.
I have a Trijicon Credo 34mm 1-8x mil-mil on an AR. It's heavy but a great fit for what I do.
FWIW, I'm waiting on a new 5.56 upper from WOA and am considering going with the
ATHLON ARES ETR 1-10x FFP IR on that one.....
Does anyone have any opinions on trijicon scopes? How do they compare to leupold and vortex?
I have a Trijicon Credo 34mm 1-8x mil-mil on an AR. It's heavy but a great fit for what I do.
I've got the previous iteration (Accupower) on a similar rig, and agree that it's a great fit for my uses.
I am using my first Accupoint 2.5-10x56 this year with the plex reticle/amber dot. I really like the glass. I’ve not used it yet at very last light with cloud cover in the woods. But, the glass is on par with scopes costing more and is better than scopes in its price range. Two things I don’t like: eye relief is too short for magnum calibers and the illumination supposedly only lasts 15 years.
I’d say the glass quality is between a Conquest and Victory but better than the V4 if comparing to Zeiss.
I like it better than the VX-3i I owned. I have no experience with Vortex.
The Credo (HX in my case) gives you more control over the illumination, a lot of control really, at the cost of needing a battery and potentially trouble down the road with the electronics. If that control is really important, then for me the choice is simple. After a lot of shuckin’ and jivin’, I got the 1-6, for my low-power model. Saves a good bit of weight and the difference in eye-relief between 1 and 6 is minimal, which I like. The 1-8 doesn’t give more adjustment with the big tube either. Still, I’d like to look through one someday.
The Credo 2.5-10 is a beast too. I’m still pondering where its final resting place will be. Very nice view for sure.
I have a few accupoints and I think the optics are very clear. One is at least 8 years old and the triangle illumination is still good. I have Zeiss and swaros, leupolds, would not hesitate to recommend a Trij.
I have proven to my own satisfaction that the fiber optics carry the load as far as illumination goes in the Accupoints. As long as there’s any skylight, the light is on. I’ve yet to carry one afield, so don’t know how it works in dark timber and/or overcast. As I said, if the illumination is crucial, I’d go with the battery-powered models. Since they’re newer, perhaps the coatings are better, perhaps not. Not sure how much the coatings figure in an optics design, so don’t know if they can just use new ones on old scopes without other changes.
I'll add having used my accupoints on a bear stand until dark, the triangle illumination does fade with fading light but is still more visible than a black reticle against a black target. Going for bear to Maine pretty soon and I'll be toting a rifle with a Trij.
Thx to all for your input.
This thread got me to buy a Trijicon.
It just arrived.
https://www.midwayusa.com/product/1009751799I would have rather had green than amber.
I would rather have MOA or BCD than mil dot.
But it is a good scope and I intend to use it.
Well, I ended up getting my first trijicon and so far in quite impressed with it. Now to dial it in at the range.
I finally mounted and dialed in the Credo HX 2.5-10x56 I bought for another rifle (since sold). It replaced a Burris FF E1 4.5-14 on my Hawkeye AW .223 . I like Burris, but this one’s markedly better, as it should be for the price. The Burris gets hard to get behind at the top end. Nothing I need to do requires more than a good, clear 10x. Used Warne High Maximas. The Credo is a load at 25oz, but the Hawkeye is too, so no loss there.
I have four now. Maybe more later, maybe not. I’m pretty well fixed for scopes with spares in the closet.
The vortex line starts to shine at the razor level!
I have a basic 3-9x40 quad x reticle with a green lighted dot. I love the way the reticle brightness self adjusts to show up when pointed into the shadows or during twilight without ever flooding with too much light. Quality of scope is about the same as a Leupold 3-9x40 in both lense clarity and weight.
I finally mounted and dialed in the Credo HX 2.5-10x56 I bought for another rifle (since sold). It replaced a Burris FF E1 4.5-14 on my Hawkeye AW .223 . I like Burris, but this one’s markedly better, as it should be for the price. The Burris gets hard to get behind at the top end. Nothing I need to do requires more than a good, clear 10x. Used Warne High Maximas. The Credo is a load at 25oz, but the Hawkeye is too, so no loss there.
I have four now. Maybe more later, maybe not. I’m pretty well fixed for scopes with spares in the closet.
Thx, I'm struggling with whether to spring for the accupoint 2.5-10×56......any chance at all a set of medium maxima will work for this scope?
Probably if on a rail.
They have a mount finder on the Warne site and a chart for each type that gives actual ring dimensions.
I have a basic 3-9x40 quad x reticle with a green lighted dot. I love the way the reticle brightness self adjusts to show up when pointed into the shadows or during twilight without ever flooding with too much light. Quality of scope is about the same as a Leupold 3-9x40 in both lense clarity and weight.
I just purchased my first Accupoint and I was a little disappointed; my guess is the tritium is at half-life or lower. It looks great when outside in full sun, but walk underneath my porch in the shade and the dot vanishes. I can BARELY see it in a completely dark room.
I'll be contacting Trijicon in the very near future to hear what they suggest, unless this is the norm.
As I’ve posted elsewhere, the heavy illumination lifting is done by the fiber optics. The tritium is pretty much for the real dark. As long as there’s some skylight overhead, the dot stands out well.
Someone with a need for illumination under all conditions and better contol will probably be better off with an electronic version. Perhaps the triangle reticles show up better, but it’s been years since I looked through one of those, and I didn’t get to test it under low light. The regular duplex with a dot is nearly perfect IMO as a duplex, with heavy bars coming quite close to the center, just the way I like them.
Someone with a need for illumination under all conditions and better contol will probably be better off with an electronic version. Perhaps the triangle reticles show up better, but it’s been years since I looked through one of those, and I didn’t get to test it under low light. The regular duplex with a dot is nearly perfect IMO as a duplex, with heavy bars coming quite close to the center, just the way I like them.
I agree, the duplex/dot IS perfect for my eyes. My eyes didn't play as well with the triangle.
I’ll have a better handle on the 3-9s after deer season. Nothing like actual conditions to sort stuff like this out. May end up with another one, but I also like the Credo HX 1-6.
I’ll have a better handle on the 3-9s after deer season. Nothing like actual conditions to sort stuff like this out. May end up with another one, but I also like the Credo HX 1-6.
This will be my first deer season with one as well.
I have a basic 3-9x40 quad x reticle with a green lighted dot. I love the way the reticle brightness self adjusts to show up when pointed into the shadows or during twilight without ever flooding with too much light. Quality of scope is about the same as a Leupold 3-9x40 in both lense clarity and weight.
I just purchased my first Accupoint and I was a little disappointed; my guess is the tritium is at half-life or lower. It looks great when outside in full sun, but walk underneath my porch in the shade and the dot vanishes. I can BARELY see it in a completely dark room.
I'll be contacting Trijicon in the very near future to hear what they suggest, unless this is the norm.
That is not normal, I can see the lighted dot in my scope in total darkness.
I own this one. Great scope!
Ten mile 3-18x44 mm
Trij 300001
I own this one. Great scope!
Ten mile 3-18x44 mm
Trij 300001
I’ve got the same one on my Mashburn. Seems good so far. We will see where it’s at after some more use but so far I can’t find anything I don’t like about it.