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December 16, 2012, 08:53 AM | #1 |
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1" tube versus 30 mm tube??
I have a ruger 77 that came with 1" scope mounts, now I am thinking about a scope with a 30 mm tube, I am not good with metric conversions, is there that much difference? What do I need to do?
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December 16, 2012, 09:13 AM | #2 |
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Yes the difference is very visual. You will need 30 mm mounts. I have almost all 30 mm scopes now,so needless to say i have a pile of 1 inch mounts laying around. What i have found is as soon as you get to the more high power scopes you run into 30 mm tubes. I can't say the light is that much better. I have one rifle with a 1 inch tube and when i shoot early in the morning i can see no difference in light gathering. I am no scope pro for sure but i think when you get to higher power scopes you objective gets bigger,so the need for a 30 mm scope tube. Im sure someone else with a lot more knowledge will chime in
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December 16, 2012, 09:18 AM | #3 |
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Thank you for the quick response 4runnerman. I think I will be waiting to change then, just put the 4-12 on the ruger but bushnell has a 2.5 -16 that looks real interesting..
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December 16, 2012, 09:34 AM | #4 |
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According to the individual at Leupold who responded to my email, the 30mm tube allows a greater range of adjustments. The light transmission is determined by the objective lens.
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December 16, 2012, 10:44 AM | #5 |
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One inch is about 25mm. It's not that the diameter is that much larger but the area (think garden hose). Area of a 25mm tube 506mm, area of 30mm tube is 706mm and transmits about twice as much light. It's also the size of the front glass, bigger glass has better light gathering power. Many tubes have flared front ends to support larger glass.
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December 16, 2012, 11:53 AM | #6 |
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The tube diameter has no effect on the optical performance of the scope. It has no effect on light transmission.
Things that matter are quality of glass and coatings, objective lens diameter, magnification, and exit pupil. Size of the scope tube does not figure into the equation. For best low light performance, you want the exit pupil of the scope to be at least as large as the entrance pupil of your eye. |
December 16, 2012, 03:27 PM | #7 | |
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Quote:
Actually the light gathering is determined by the objective lens, but at the point where the internal adjustments kick in the "pencil of light" from that lens has been tightened down to about 1/8" (3mm or so) so adding diameter allows more movment of the internal tube which is how you adjust your crosshairs. Think of it this way. Draw a 1/8" circle on paper then draw a bigger 30mm (1 3/16") circle round it. Now draw a 1" (25.4mm) circle inside of the 30mm one, but outside the 1/8" one & you'll see how much more movment is possible for a scope with a 30mm tube as opposed to a 1" tube.*** Light Transmition is governed by design of the glass, optical coating efficiency & so on. *** yes I know, these are approximate, but it does give a visual clue to how optical performance works. the 1/8" beam of light thrown back onto the internal tube is way smaller than either of the other 2 measurements, but it can "wander about more" in a bigger circle..
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December 19, 2012, 04:06 PM | #8 |
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You might need higher mounts for the 30 mm scope. Do not allow the scope to touch the barrel or reciever.
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