I don't know.Interesting point regarding the clutter and I thought earlier about one potential downside of the chest shot could be not having your scope focussed correctly (not yourself more a general observation if this makes sense?) Here's the scenario, you are plotted up waiting for the deer to exit the woods at about 100yds away, parallax set, scope focussed and magged perfectly when all of a sudden you hear a bark to your left hand side and another doe has entered the field 30m downwind of you and has cut your scent, swing the gun round all you see is a blurry outline until you bring your scope into focus then take the shot. On a broadside chest shot I wonder how many people would take the shot without re-focussing the scope?
My stalking scope has fixed parallax, and I've never touched the focus ring since the day I mounted the scope and adjusted it to suit my eye.
I'm inclined to think that "less is more" on a stalking scope, which is why I sold the one with all the fiddly bits and bought a simpler, but better quality, scope.
