Every month there seems to be a new addition to the long line of optics available to the rifle shooter. Be it vermin,…
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I have always been an advocate of buying the best scope you can afford, as its reliability and performance will repay you in the long run. This still holds true but the cheap scopes of 10 years ago have improved to the point that they are often all you need.
One such is the Atom, which has an impressive spec for a scope only costing £59.95. You get 3.5-10x magnification range, an illuminated reticule, a 50mm-diameter objective lens and external raised turret adjustments. It is light, so a rifle with this scope and a sound moderator fitted is still a handy outfit to take into the field.
The larger ½in adjustment per click is a bit coarse, but I managed to zero the shots to the cross-hairs just fine at 50 yards on the rimfires and close enough on the centrefire. At, say, 200 yards that is an inch adjustment per click — a fact worth bearing in mind.
Every month there seems to be a new addition to the long line of optics available to the rifle shooter. Be it vermin,…
The 3-12x56mm scope, with its good range of magnification settings and 56mm objective lens size allowing plenty of light to…
I tested the Atom on a variety of rifles and calibres over the course of a month. It performed in very hot weather, in rain and on an air rifle, .22 rimfire, .22-250 and .30-47L rifle with no problems. It is light and I had no difficulty mounting it to all the rifles. As already noted, the zero and re-zero tests were fine, though that ½in adjustment per click is too much.
The illumination is excellent and gives a decent non-bleeding illuminated reticule, while the choice of colours is handy against different backgrounds. Optically there is no parallax adjustment, so on the higher magnifications at ranges below 50 yards it is hard to focus the image and reticule — which is normal, but worth bearing in mind.
Optical quality is pretty good. The image is flat and not convex as on some cheap scopes. There is a small degree of aberration to the edges, but the main central sections are clear and light transmission is fine for normal use.
The Atom fitted to a Sako custom rimfire accounted for these two bunnies with no problem
This scope should appeal to air rifle and rimfire users in particular as its price will not add too much to a rifle outfit. That said, I would choose a ¼in per click adjustment model.
For more info or to buy visit In Your Sights
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