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The Best LPVO Scopes of 2023, Tested and Reviewed

The Best LPVO Scopes of 2023, Tested and Reviewed

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Testing the best LPVO on a bolt action rifle.
Scott Einsmann

We tested a wide range of LPVO scopes for their optical quality and shooting performance


The post The Best LPVO Scopes of 2023, Tested and Reviewed appeared first on Outdoor Life.



                              

                   
Testing the best LPVO on a bolt action rifle.
Scott Einsmann

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                                          data-hr**="ht**://www.amazon.c**/Sightmark-SM13140CR1-Presidio-1-6x24-Black/dp/B09SBS1LKC?tag=camdenxodl-20&ascsubtag=0000OL0000231057O0000000020230906030000%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20%20&asc_source=browser&asc_refurl=ht**%3A%2F%2Fwww.outdoorlife.c**%2Ffeed"
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            Best Overall
         

            We tested the Sig Sauer TANGO6T 1-6x24.
         

            Sig Sauer TANGO6T 1-6×24
         

           
               
                  SEE IT
               

           

         

            Best co*petition
         

            We teste the Nightforce NX8 1-8x24.
         

            Nightforce NX8 1-8×24
         

           
               
                  SEE IT
               

           

         

            Best Value
         

            We tested the Sightmark Presidio 1-6x24.
         

            Sightmark Presidio 1-6×24
         

           
               
                  SEE IT
               

           

         

 





The rise of AR platforms has driven innovation and market share of the LPVO, sized-down riflescopes that feature low magnification, small objective lenses, and reticles designed for fast shooting in relatively dark conditions.





These scopes sometimes have reticle subtensions that mate up with ballistic parabolas of standard .223 or .308 cartridges, co*mon chamberings for ARs. They typically feature illuminated reticles and capped turrets, the idea being that you’re not dialing, but rather using holdovers in a dynamic situation. Think personal defense, nighttime hog hunting, or co*petition shooting in which you have to move, adjust, and fire at unknown distances in changeable light conditions, sometimes with the aid of a thermal or night-vision module in tandem with your riflescope.





But a funny thing happened along the way to designing a purpose-built optic: The LPVO became our new versatile riflescope, as useful atop a rimfire plinker as on an AR you might keep in the closet, and extremely well-suited to turkey shotguns and dangerous-game rifles. This category is maturing quickly, with the significant evolution of dual-purpose first-plane reticles, and this year we saw appealing growth in illumination systems, turret operation, and reticles designed for close-quarters engagement and far-off precision.





We received nearly 20 LPVO scopes for this year’s test, a mix of new introductions and models on the market for a year or two. From those submissions, we whittled the field down to 10 that represent a cross-section of designs, intended uses, and prices. We hope our test results are a useful buyers’ guide for shooters looking to invest in this ascendant species of optic.









How We Tested the Best LPVO Scopes





We tested the best LPVO riflescopes.
We put each LPVO through the same regimen of accuracy testing on bullseye targets, tracking, and return-to-zero assessment on a 10-minute grid.  Scott Einsmann




Just as our test has evolved to evaluate rifle scopes on a different basis than we judge spotting scopes and binoculars because their job as projectile-placement instruments is categorically different from image magnifying and clarifying optics, we test LPVOs differently than precision scopes.





We gave slightly less emphasis to turret feedback, for instance, than reticle illumination. And we rewarded reticle versatility of an LPVO slightly more than we do optical quality, the idea being that these aren’t observational instruments so much as bullet-placement devices.





Because ours is a test of brand-new along with venerated veteran LPVOs, we used a couple of models that we consider the Platonic ideal of the platform for the basis of co*parison. For higher-end co*petition scopes, we used both the Nightforce ATACR 1-8×24 F1 and Vortex’s Razor HD Gen III 1-10×24 as our basis of co*parison. For all-around AR/dangerous game/turkey optics, we used Leupold’s excellent Patrol 6HD as the benchmark. And to co*pare price-point LPVOs, we used the AR Optics 1-6×24 from Bushnell to assess the attributes and performance shooters can expect from a scope priced under $300.





We measured the optical resolution of the best spotting scopes using a resolution target developed by the Air Force.
We measured the optical resolution of the best LPVO riflescopes using a resolution target developed by the Air Force. Scott Einsmann




Just as with our other Optics Test categories, we put all submissions through the same criteria. First, we measure optical resolution, using the diminishing black-and-white lines of a 1951 Air Force Resolution Target to score the optical performance of each submission. We also measure the low-light performance of each LPVO scope by mounting them to tripods and focusing them as a group at 200 yards at a black-and-white resolution target at twilight, all in order to measure the brightness of the glass. As we discussed, neither resolution nor low-light performance are deal-breakers for this category, but both criteria provide valuable insights into the optical performance of the scope.





Then we take each submission to the shooting range. We put each LPVO through the same regimen of accuracy testing on bullseye targets, tracking, and return-to-zero assessment on a 10-minute grid, but we spent relatively more time on shooting drills to assess their co*bination of instinctive aiming, precision, and versatility. These included rapid target transition drills from standing, seated, and prone positions, followed by a big-bore instinctive shooting drill in which we walked a target course of steel plates positioned anywhere from 20 to 70 yards, and when a referee blew a whistle, the shooter had to find and hit a target within 5 seconds.





We break our 10-point scoring into four general categories:






  • Optical performance (15 percent of total grade)




  • Aiming system (a whopping 60 percent of total grade)




  • Design (15 percent)




  • Value (10 percent)





The average of these categories is the basis of our grades, detailed below.





Optical performance includes the resolution and low-light tests plus the more subjective assessments of image quality and brightness. Aiming-system performance assesses interior (reticle design, visibility, and utility as well as illumination) and exterior aiming system (turret positivity and indexing, parallax adjustment, zero stop), precision, and shootability. Design considers the exterior finish, interior blacking, mounting dimensions, and durability.





And then our price/value score rates how much scope—along with warranty and amenities such as rings, extra turrets, and lens covers—you get for your money. The LPVO that gets the highest overall score wins our editor’s choice award for the best in the category; the optic with the highest price/value score wins our Great Buy recognition, and we give other awards based on specific attributes.





How We Grade LPVO Riflescopes





Tester grades LPVO riflescopes.
We graded LPVO riflescopes after in-depth testing. Scott Einsmann




Our 100-point evaluation adds up to a total numeric score, but we translate those to grades for each submission. Our optical performance grade co*bines the scores from resolution, low-light, and image quality. Our aiming system performance grade aggregates the interior/exterior aiming system, precision, and shootability scores. The design grade considers construction, innovation, versatility, and durability. And then the price/value grade is our good-deal grade.





To earn an “excellent grade,” the average of that category must be 9 or higher, which is extremely hard to achieve. “very good” is an average score of 7 to 9. A “good” grade is 5 to 7. Our “fair” grade is 3 to 25, and “poor” is anything under 3.





Best LPVO Riflescopes: Reviews & Reco*mendations





Best Overall: Sig Sauer TANGO6T 1-6×24




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Scott Einsmann



     

             


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Score Card






  • Optical Performance: Good




  • Aiming System: Very Good




  • Design: Very Good




  • Price/Value: Good





Key Features






  • First-plane Hellfire DWLR-556 reticle




  • Inverted horseshoe reticle tuned to 5.56 ballistics




  • 30mm tube




  • Pull-to-turn illumination




  • Capped turrets tuned to .2 MRAD click values




  • 31 MRAD total internal adjustment




  • Parallax fixed at 300 meters





Pros






  • Battle-proven design




  • Ships with ALPHA4 cantilever mount




  • 11-step illumination (nine daylight, two night-vision)




  • Good glass




  • Liberal mounting dimensions




  • Flat dark earth color




  • Mounting line on side of tube reduces cant





Cons






  • Reticle utility is limited




  • At lowest power, the reticle is hard to see




  • At over $1,700 street price, an expensive scope





The Sig TANGO6T was not a runaway favorite, and its fairly limited utility made it one of the least likely scopes to win what is ultimately a test of versatility.





But this tight and bright scope stacked up points by doing a number of things pretty well, and it’s a testament to that niche reticle—its drops are tuned to the ballistic parabola of a 5.56 NATO bullet with a muzzle velocity of 3,210 fps in a 24-inch barrel—that testers reco*mended it for a dangerous-game rifle, a lever gun, and since the test, it’s found a home on my .450 Bushmaster.





Testers liked the Sig Sauer controls.
Testers appreciated the Sig Sauer TANGO6T’s oversized and precise controls. Scott Einsmann




We liked its oversized controls and their movement. The big, grippy power-changing ring is easy to manipulate with gloved hands. The capped turrets turn with authority, thanks to their oversized diameter. And the illumination control turns with positivity, and turns off between intensity levels. We also liked the indexing on the scope. The zero indication is easy to see, the power-changing ring has half-magnification hashes to further aid in precision. And the white mounting line on the outside of the flat dark earth tube is a simple and smart aid to ensure that you don’t introduce cant to the scope as you position it in rings. We wish more brands would employ this feature.





Rifle Scopes photo
Sig TANGO6 at 1 power.  Scott Einsmann




The class of Japanese glass that Sig uses in this scope is good, which made us wonder why the TANGO6 received lower-than-expected resolution and low-light scores. The scope made up ground with high construction, durability, and design scores. We recognize that the TANGO6T is the civilian version of a scope that has served the U.S. military branches as their preferred Direct View Optic. That category requires a minimum magnification of 1X with no rounding (or fisheye distortion) and a maximum magnification of 6X.





Rifle Scopes photo
Sig TANGO6 at 6 power. Scott Einsmann




The inverted horseshoe Hellfire DWLR performs as an illuminated red-dot sight from 1-3.5X, when the first-plane references are too fine to see clearly. But from 4 to 6X, the bullet drops and windage dots are easy to deploy. With a 100-yard zero, the scope gives 5.56 shooters drop values out to 800 yards, with corresponding windage marks for a 10 mph crosswind. Our favorite co*bination of instinctive shooting and precision is about 4.5X, when the center aiming point provides fast target engagement, the field of view is wide enough to receive peripheral information, and you can still see those precision references.





The Sig was our favorite scope to use in dynamic target transition drills, and it performed very well on our big-bore instinctive shooting range.





The Sig received low price/value marks, largely because its price—it retails for $2,200 and sells for a street price of a little over $1,700)—puts this out of reach of casual shooters. The addition of an excellent cantilever mount and a set of smart lens caps that feature magnets that allow the lids to stow out of the way when the scope is deployed are both nice additions, but don’t change our mind that the TANGO6T is a little overpriced.





If you’re looking for a hard-wearing LPVO for a .223 or 5×56 AR, and you can afford the Sig, this is an excellent choice. But it’s also a fine scope for a wide range of other close-range shooting situations.





Best Value: Sightmark Presidio 1-6×24




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Scott Einsmann



     

             


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Score Card









Key Features









Pros









Cons









This scope will get the job done, especially if the job is ringing steel out to about 300 yards with your AR, and then cleaning plates inside about 100 yards. The second-plane BDC reticle has just enough references to be useful without being distracting, and the illumination blazes at a nicely visible daylight brightness, though its lowest intensity is still too bright for low-light conditions.





But there are sizable jobs this scope won’t get done. Notably, that includes precision distance work. The reticle just doesn’t have enough references to make it effective beyond that 300 mark. It also may give you a headache. The glass was among the least impressive in the field, finishing at the bottom of our low-light test and near the bottom in resolution scores. Testers used terms like “wavy” and “blurry” to describe the edge of the image, and panning at 1X you notice a fish-eye effect, evidence of some pincushion optical aberration. Controls are hard to turn.





But “it’s not a bad optic for the price,” concludes tester and OL’s shooting editor, John B. Snow. “A guy on a budget could do worse.”





Indeed, for under $300 you get a very serviceable LPVO, with a magnification range that will handle everything from personal defense to predator hunting, and ran our dynamic shooting drills without pause. The 6-step illumination is serviceable, and the low-profile rezeroable turrets are decent to dial, though we wish the indexing was more useful.





You might even mount the Presidio on a rimfire or even a turkey gun. That’s a lot of value for a fair price, and the main reason the Sightmark is our Great Buy LPVO scope.





Best co*petition: Nightforce NX8 1-8×24




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Scott Einsmann



     

             


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Score Card









Key Features









Pros









Cons









The NX8 has been around since 2017, but this version features a number of significant upgrades. First, it has a capped elevation turret, a response to shooters who wanted insurance that elevation adjustments wouldn’t accidentally move during transit or rough handling. Second, it’s offered in a se*y dark earth color in addition to the classic black. But the main change is the availability of the FC-DMx reticle, previously available only in the higher-grade ATACR scope.





We tested the Nightforce's controls.
There’s no other LPVO reticle in our test with this level of precision or scale of aiming possibility.  Scott Einsmann




The reticle is worth your attention. It’s the best precision reticle in this category, which is dominated by first-plane reticles that offer fast aiming at low powers and close-enough precision at higher mags. The FC-DMx does both pretty well, but its superpower is offering a mother-ton of aiming points at 6X. The heart of the FC-DMx is a segmented circle that can be blazingly bright with the highest illumination intensity. Still, it really co*es into its own at about 4.8X when the aiming grid beco*es visible. The 1 MRAD grid allows for 10 MILS of holdover and windage holdoff, and if you want to get really crazy, there are holds for 15 and 20 MILS at the bottom of the field of view.





Rifle Scopes photo
The NX8 1-8x with FC-DMx reticle at 8 power. Scott Einsmann




There’s no other LPVO reticle in our test with this level of precision or scale of aiming possibility. The rest of the scope is equally noteworthy. The turrets track with repeatable precision and the turrets are crisp and positive. The illumination control is similarly tactile. Testers liked the Nightforce’s indexing and overall handling, but noted that the magnification knob needs a throw lever because the scope mounts so low to the rifle that it’s hard to grip the dial.





Rifle Scopes photo
The NX8 at 1X.  Scott Einsmann




Testers struggled with focusing both the image and the reticle, and felt the NX8 was pretty pricey given its fairly limited utility as a low-power precision scope. But with all that, it’s a great choice if you intend to do much long-range target work with an AR.





Best for 3-Gun: Athlon Cronus BTR Gen2 UHD 1-6×24




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            We tested the Athlon Cronus BTR Gen2 UHD 1-6x24.
                     

                 

           

 

         

       

Scott Einsmann



     

             


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Score Card









Key Features









Pros









Cons









This scope caused quite a bit of discussion among testers, mainly over whether the LPVO platform is optimized with a first- or second-plane reticle. While the consensus is that a first-plane reticle boosts versatility (with a reticle in the front focal plane, a scope can serve as both a fast-aiming red-dot and a distance precision rig), the Athlon makes a good case for the utility of a second-plane reticle.





In the case of the Cronus BTR, the reticle is optimized for 3-gun co*petition, allowing shooters to engage targets at close range with the illuminated center dot, but at the highest magnification, the reticle guides .223 rounds out to 600 yards, with a 200-yard zero. It’s a smart, simple, very effective design that’s in keeping with the good manners of this scope.





The Cronus BTR scored near the top of our resolution test, a testament to its very good glass. It didn’t bring much game to the low-light test, but overall testers thought the image was very good for the configuration. Testers also liked the positive zero stop, the clear and bold indexing on the turrets, and both the illumination dial operation and the crisp illuminated center dot that shredded the dynamic target transition drill.





We’d like to see the power-changing ring have bolder indexing, and increase magnification to at least 8-power to better see distant targets, but overall this is a very useful scope for co*petition shooters and anyone who wants quality co*ponents in a short-range optic.





Best Dangerous Game Scope: Tract Toric UHD 1-8×24




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Scott Einsmann



     

             


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Score Card









Key Features









Pros









Cons









This scope demonstrates the wide versatility of the LPVO platform, while simultaneously proving the limitations for some very specific shooting situations. The second-plane hash reticle has references on the vertical and horizontal stadia, which experienced shooters can use for rimfire plinking, for quick short-range drills, and for slow-fire shooting at distance. We tested an MOA version of this scope; it’s also available in MRAD. Both cost just shy of $1,000.





But because the reticle has no holdoff references for wind adjustments at distance, and because its MOA references are useful at the highest power, this doesn’t bring much to the long-range precision game. That’s OK, because it’s intended to be a fast, simple scope that brings the best 1-power game of all our submissions and has the smoothest, most pleasing controls of the test.





The center-dot illumination is key to the Toric’s appeal. At the highest intensity, the dot (it looks to be about .5 MOA in diameter) offers a bright aiming point that draws your eye to the target. It’s especially quick and intuitive at 1-power, anchoring a huge, bright image that almost appears like you’re not looking through a scope, at all. The Tract’s controls are noteworthy. From the power-changing dial to the turrets and illumination adjustment, all moving parts have the same mellifluous precision.





The Toric scored right in the middle of the pack in terms of low-light performance and optical resolution. For a second-plane design, the reticle received decent marks, though testers questioned the milling hashes. The stadia has marks at 4, 8, and 10 MOA, with 40 MOA of elevation holds. The team thought a more intuitive demarcation would be to have either 5 or 2.5 MOA hashes in order to conform to a base-10 alignment. The other aiming-system quibble we had was the tiny, hard-to-read indexing on the low-profile turrets.





The Tract handled our precision and dynamic target transition drills with grace and talent. But the scope really came into its own during our close-range big-bore work. At 1X to 3X, the scope co*es to the eye in a snap and the daylight-bright illumination finds the target like a guided laser. This rapid target acquisition talent, co*bined with a solid build and simple operation makes the Tract our choice for a dangerous-game rifle, when shots are expected to be both point-blank and at moderate distances.





Steiner T6Xi 1-6×24




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