I am in the middle of the Zeiss V4 review and the one I have chose to review was the 6-24 x 50 with the Zmoa BDC turret ,
I have to say I am not going to through the whole review on here mainly because it has not finished, but, I am gonna to write about how surprised I am on how far quality scope manufacturing has evolved over the years give us stalkers and shooters some amazing variety to choose from and none more than Zeiss.
Zeiss chose to ditch their Terra scope range and focus as their lower budget scope the V4,
The V4 is not German glass like the V6 and V8, and for the most part I am not a huge fan of Japanese glass and, dare I say it, neither are many UK and European hunters, but, Japanese glass has come a very long way in the last decade and providing some amazing quality optics and when you couple that with European scope engineering from companies such as Zeiss then you know your into something special.
One thing I have to say is the price of the V4 is less than £1000 for true 1000yrd performance with turrets that break glass on every turn, in some places the V4 is as low as £800 brand new. Now when you look at the price of top quality scopes like the V4 along with various others on the market, then, you see second hand scopes going for the same price you can understand why the second hand scope market has become stagnant and awash with scopes that were upwards of £2k a couple of years ago not being able to be sold. Glass is a hard sell.
I can only imagine what the scope market is going to be like in the future if this is the quality we are getting from our current mid-range priced market.
In conversation with many other shooters within all the shooting communities it seems the scopes we use can out shoot the abilities of the "rifle-person" and I know they can out shoot me.
I am currently testing the Zeiss V4 6-24x50 as a hunting and long range hunting scope housed upon the Tikka T3 .270 rifle, shooting a very basic and cheap homeload set up , FED brass , CCI 200 primers, Sierra Prohunter 130gr bullets and 59gr RE 19 powder and the performance I get from that rifle is shooting the 130gr at 2930fps with a BC of 0.373 and an SD of around 9 . SO not the best load in the world but does group sub quarter MOA at 100m. With this set up housing the Zeiss Victory HT 2.5-10x50 scope I dropped 5 rounds centre on a pumpkin at 500yrds so I am eager to see if I can run a similar performance with the V4, I have shot a few deer with the V4 already and I am very impressed so far.
Back to what I was saying about scopes under £1000, the quality you have to admit has definitely improved over the years offering very capable, or should I say, immensely capable performance for half the price of ones 5-10 years earlier.
I am looking forward to the future.
I have to say I am not going to through the whole review on here mainly because it has not finished, but, I am gonna to write about how surprised I am on how far quality scope manufacturing has evolved over the years give us stalkers and shooters some amazing variety to choose from and none more than Zeiss.
Zeiss chose to ditch their Terra scope range and focus as their lower budget scope the V4,
The V4 is not German glass like the V6 and V8, and for the most part I am not a huge fan of Japanese glass and, dare I say it, neither are many UK and European hunters, but, Japanese glass has come a very long way in the last decade and providing some amazing quality optics and when you couple that with European scope engineering from companies such as Zeiss then you know your into something special.
One thing I have to say is the price of the V4 is less than £1000 for true 1000yrd performance with turrets that break glass on every turn, in some places the V4 is as low as £800 brand new. Now when you look at the price of top quality scopes like the V4 along with various others on the market, then, you see second hand scopes going for the same price you can understand why the second hand scope market has become stagnant and awash with scopes that were upwards of £2k a couple of years ago not being able to be sold. Glass is a hard sell.
I can only imagine what the scope market is going to be like in the future if this is the quality we are getting from our current mid-range priced market.
In conversation with many other shooters within all the shooting communities it seems the scopes we use can out shoot the abilities of the "rifle-person" and I know they can out shoot me.
I am currently testing the Zeiss V4 6-24x50 as a hunting and long range hunting scope housed upon the Tikka T3 .270 rifle, shooting a very basic and cheap homeload set up , FED brass , CCI 200 primers, Sierra Prohunter 130gr bullets and 59gr RE 19 powder and the performance I get from that rifle is shooting the 130gr at 2930fps with a BC of 0.373 and an SD of around 9 . SO not the best load in the world but does group sub quarter MOA at 100m. With this set up housing the Zeiss Victory HT 2.5-10x50 scope I dropped 5 rounds centre on a pumpkin at 500yrds so I am eager to see if I can run a similar performance with the V4, I have shot a few deer with the V4 already and I am very impressed so far.
Back to what I was saying about scopes under £1000, the quality you have to admit has definitely improved over the years offering very capable, or should I say, immensely capable performance for half the price of ones 5-10 years earlier.
I am looking forward to the future.


