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ETX Dad
Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2024
Mounted this scope on a Rossi Model 92 357 magnum rifle. Set up like a scout rifle. I like the variable power and it was easy to sight in. I am not worried about recoil due to the fact that this little rifle has very little. I have shot it several times and it holds zero. This makes a nice rifle to walk around with in the woods and the scope extends my ability to make longer shots.
Allison Valle
Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2012
I was a little skeptical to buy this scope because it was a pistol scope and it was made by BSA. I had to find a very long eye relief scope to be mounted on my Ruger Gunsite Rifle .308, so BSA was the last place I would look. And I owned a BSA scope before and they were made pretty cheaply. For the $100 I decided to try it. To my surprise it worked great on the RGS 308. The scope seemed to handle the 308 recoil really well and since it was a scout rifle, it was mounted forward on the rifle. It zero'd in pretty fast and maintained zero for the next 30 rounds or so. The eye relief was just right since the scope needed to have at least 12 inches.PROS:1. Value - for the price this scope is a gem and looks like will be able to stand the higher caliber rounds of my 308. Built very solid and not at all flimsy. The overall construction is great.2. Eye Relief - very long relief. Looks like 12" to 20"; so works well for forward mounted optic weapon systems.3. Picture Sight - Clear and nice picture4. Variable Magnification - x2-x7 nice option to have.CONS:1. Parallax is terrible (50 yds). You have to be dead center looking into the eye port to see anything, so target acquisition is very slow.2. x32 eye port is a little small and they should have made a x40. This coupled with the parallax issues slows down target acquisition.3. No illumination. I wish it has some illumination. Would have paid the little extra $$$ for the illumination - if they had a model with it.4. No where can I find that this scope is water/shock resistance :( Not sure this scope will withstand a drop..Overall 4 stars. I would buy this for a plinking rifle or range rifle. This would probably not withstand the rigors of combat or even hardcore hunting. But just for target practice...its great. (Former US Army)
Robert H. Allen
Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2012
I bought this BSA adjustable EDGE Scope for my Ruger .22 Cal Single Six revolver. It was very easy to mount using the weigand rail mount I had put on the Ruger. The Scope is of excellent quality and the optics are fantastic, especially for the price. This Scope comes with eyepiece and ocular see-through shield protectors and I used them recently in a light rain and could still see fine! You can actually use this on other firearms of all kinds although I would not try to mount it on a smaller pistol. The Scope is approx. 10 inches long. I would recommend this Scope to anyone wanting a very good, rugged, solid Scope at a great price! Service from this Vendor was excellent!
Smilin' Kev
Reviewed in the United States on October 16, 2012
I've got the BSA 2-7x32 Edge pistol scope mounted (via a Leapers/UTG adapter rail and medium-profile Leapers/UTG Weaver rings) on the long steel breech of a .22 caliber Crosman 1322 air pistol that I'm customizing. The Crosman 1322 is a very inexpensive, reliable, easy-to-pump pellet pistol that can be fed inexpensive ammunition (such as 14.3 grain Crosman Premier Hollow Point pellets that cost one penny or less when you buy a tin of 500). It's great for plinking, informal target practice, and - at 10-20 yard ranges - eliminating small pest birds, squirrels, etc. I've usually used a red-dot sight on this kind of pistol, but this time I decided to give a pistol scope a try. I'm glad that I did!The BSA 2-7x32 Edge pistol scope allows me to achieve about a 50% increase in accuracy with the Crosman 1322. With a red dot sight, the stock 1322 will consistently produce (in my relatively unskilled hands, shooting from whatever kind of rest is available) five-shot groups that measure .75" at 15 yards. With the BSA 2-7x32, however, I'm able to regularly achieve groups that average .5" - and I can consistently keep them centered on the bullseye (or whatever point-of-aim I'm trying to strike). For me, the BSA 2-7x32 works best in the 3x-4x range, since there's enough magnification to allow me to "aim small/miss small" and there is still a generous range of eye relief available. The scope is clear and sharp at 7x, but there's a very small eye-relief zone within which you can find and stabilize the target's image. And, at 2x-4x, I can still easily use the scope with both eyes open. At anything higher, my brain wastes too much time trying to resolve the discrepancies in the sizes of the images it's getting from my right eye and left eye.Although the BSA 2-7x32 is NOT a scope that has a short-range parallax setting, I haven't had any difficulties (especially at 2x-4x) with keeping the reticle stable and fixed on a target as close as 8-10 yards. The scope - and the Crosman 1322 (and similar air pistols) - is not intended to be a highly precise target scope. However, it is very nicely designed for accurate hunting and plinking and "zombie target" shooting. The glass/image is free from distortion (all the way to the edges); the scope transmits a surprising amount of light; and the reticle is easy to see (and center) - and it doesn't obscure your point-of-aim, as does a red dot sight. The scope's fit-and-finish is excellent. The windage, elevation, and diopter adjustments are easy to make - and they stay where you put them. Since the Crosman 1322 produces almost no recoil, I can't testify about how the scope would function on a spring-powered pistol (or a firearm with stronger recoil). Based on the general high quality of the scope's materials and operation, however, my guess is that it would be durable.The scope comes with a useful set of see-through plastic covers for the objective lens and eyepiece. I wasn't bothered by the fact that the scope is not packaged with any rings, since there are so many different options for mounting this kind of scope on a pistol or scout rifle.Overall, I think the BSA is a very good value. It's a BIG step above the pistol scopes in the $50-$60 range and, unless you've got a high-dollar hand cannon on which you're going to mount a scope, it will look great and perform well.
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