Which scope Swaro Z8i or Zeiss V8?

GMan14

Well-Known Member
Which one would you chose & why (pro’s/cons)?

Swaro Z8i 3.5-28x50

Zeiss V8 2.8-20x56 or V8 4.8-35x60

 
Get behind them. I can’t get on with Zeiss illuminated reticles because of my astigmatism. It caused the illuminated dot to flair badly. Yet the Swarovski illuminated reticles and Schmidt and bender don’t suffer in the same way.

I found out the hard way having purchased three V8’s 🤦‍♂️
 
I’ve side by side compared both having owned them. The Swaro is much brighter in low light but the eye box relief is terrible at high mag, with the Zeiss eye box being much more tolerant of eye relief distance.
 
Swaro for me, the lens coatings seem to give better definition than Zeiss and the legendary customer service is a comfort should anything go wrong.
 
Which one would you chose & why (pro’s/cons)?

Swaro Z8i 3.5-28x50

Have never bought the new Z series of Swaro riflescope.

But I can assure you at nearly £3k it's not worth it.

Plenty of Swaro Ds scopes on the Classifieds now, and for good reason!

Zeiss V8 2.8-20x56

Heavy

Stupidly expensive

Stupid maintube size (36mm, although there is a new version in 34mm I believe)

Reticle (4a) is terrible, 1970's design

Very poor contrast

Illumination has failed on mine (work rifle) but no time to send back to Ze Germans for repair.

Some of the best stalking/target scopes to be had were the Bushnell Elite Tactical/LRHS/LRTS.

Can be found for around £300 and the scopes above are not 10x better!
 
I have a Z8i and it's not a patch on a Z6i. Swarovski have missed the point by failing to provide 5mm click resolution at 100m. Top glass without precise adjustment is absolute bollocks.
Regards
JCS
 
i’ve got both and they are both outstanding optics, zeiss on a 243 and the swaro on the 204
if i had to chose between the two it would be the zeiss purely on the red dot being as sharp as a pin
my advice would be get behind both of them and see which one suits you and your shooting

S&B are deffo worth a look through as well all top drawer optics
 
Predominantly stalking, so want to benefit from low light conditions with decent magnification. Also want to use it on range 500 - 1000m
If you want to shoot extended range, you really need a FFP reticle for ranging and adjustments - it's not easy with a SFP reticle. Neither of the Zeiss are really designed for longer range, despite the mag - they just don't have the adjustment (see Richard Utting's excellent review). If you are hell bent on these then def look through them. I'm another that prefers the Swaro glass to the Zeiss - but that doesn't make it right for you.

Perhaps consider something like the IOR Lutaz or Ranger as a hybrid scope as an alternate to those you've mentioned. The glass is excellent (Schott) and the coatings make for good contrast, although they are not perhaps as 'bright' as the other two - but do very well at twilight.
 
Predominantly stalking, so want to benefit from low light conditions with decent magnification. Also want to use it on range 500 - 1000m

I’d say that rules out the 4.8-35; the other two have more-useful magnification ranges for hunting, reasonably-sized main tubes (30 mm), and lighter weights.

For low-light stalking, I’d take a Zeiss HT over any of them; super-high magnification is pretty useless in dim conditions, and its 12X top end will get you out to 1000 m just fine.
 
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I’d say that rules out the 4.8-35; the other two have more-useful magnification ranges for hunting, 30-mm main tubes, and lighter weights.

For low-light stalking, I’d take a Zeiss HT over any of them; super-high magnification is pretty useless in dim conditions, and its 12X top end will get you out to 1000 m just fine.
On paper the Swaro has marginally better light transmission 93% compared to Zeiss at 92%.

Twilight shooting is relatively new to me, as I’ve always shot day time before stalking. After using various scopes in twilight, clarity seems pretty important to squeeze the most
out of successful lowlight conditions.

Magnification range gives plenty of room for change in my strategy/use, hence why I’m looking for a larger magnification range in hope it provides a more versatile one stop solution for that particular rifle. Noting other comments on FFP & SFP, arguably if you’re dialling in with correct ballistic data & turret the output is similar within a reasonable grouping assuming the turret rotates enough turns.

Another key consideration for me is weight in addition to magnification & light transmission. My key focus for this assembly is light weight as a primary with magnification & light transmission as secondary. The Swaro is ~200g lighter with larger magnification than the Zeiss. I’ve been recommended from others to go Zeiss, but the Swaro seems to fit the spec better on paper. Really I need to field test both!

The build I have currently (rifle, scope, mod & mounts) is just over 3.2kg without ammo based on the Swaro. This is the area I want to be
 
@GMan14
Just keep in mind that there’s a more to a long-range target scope than magnification, and capped hunting turrets aren’t exactly ideal for dialling — though the Zeiss can be equipped with their ASV+ option, which certainly helps.

By the way, 3.2 kg complete for a scoped and moderated rifle is incredibly light. Details? :D
 
The zeiss V6 5-30x50 would fit your needs.
Otherwise you could buy a lightweight stalking scope and a good target scope and mounts for both for less than the price of the two scopes you are considering.
 
I’d say that rules out the 4.8-35; the other two have more-useful magnification ranges for hunting, reasonably-sized main tubes (30 mm), and lighter weights.

For low-light stalking, I’d take a Zeiss HT over any of them; super-high magnification is pretty useless in dim conditions, and its 12X top end will get you out to 1000
@GMan14
Just keep in mind that there’s a more to a long-range target scope than magnification, and capped hunting turrets aren’t exactly ideal for dialling — though the Zeiss can be equipped with their ASV+ option, which certainly helps.

By the way, 3.2 kg complete for a scoped and moderated rifle is incredibly light. Details? :D
Weatherby Backcountry Ti (carbon stock) 2.2 kg, Swaro Z8 3.5-28x59 0.665kg, Freyr & Devilk titanium 3D 232 moderator .232kg & Dinpal titanium mounts 88g. Cost ~£8k for 3.2kg. Little bit more cost and weight for ballistic turret but think it’s negligible for the benefit
 
Doesn't sound like your stalking so much as sniping ?
An option would be a good honest stalking scope at say 3-12x50 and another target based scope, both in quality picatinny mounts ?
 
Difference of 1% light transmission ?????? You need between 3-5% at best to notice any difference in low light. Each persons preference is an individual thing. Some are brand loyal and cannot see past their own brand. Others get on with one brand better than the other.
Look through a range of models and choose the one that suits you. As for glass types, most company’s may use the same glass, the coating recipes are definitely different. Zeiss use to focus on the blue light spectrum, which may appear as low contrast during daylight but in low light is a benefit as the human eye is sensitive to blue light in lowlight conditions. Others focus their optics at varying light spectrums, not a negative, just a preference. High transmission figure may only be valid at a certain light reading, not across the entire spectrum, so a high transmission figure may only cover a small nanometer area and be lower at other points.
 
I have two zig 2.3-18 -56 I cannot fault them, I have a Z6 that was my first Swaro and that’s very good but the Z8’s are a step up, not cheap but no top end glass is. i had a Zeiss Victory HD and sold it
 
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