Dalua,
firstly one should find out how capable your rifle is. Possibly done on a bench. My preference is to get it below 1/2" on most rifles (others have other standards). Only once this is sorted one can judge results from different shooting positions. Otherwise it is like trying to measure something with a broken vernier.
Then of course it depends on what standards you try to achieve in the field. If you are a sunday shooter that say's no to 90% of presented shots due to the animal being a bit too far away, grass too high, wrong angle, too dark, can't see it properly (with the 4mag
) etc. well then one does not need very high standards. (Our Landowners regard this group of shooters as "useless")
Of course a, say 3-20 mag scope will give you way better possibilities than a 4 or 6 mag scope. 6 is way too much for quick action in dense cover...way too little if you are looking at a 150m head shot in high grass.... who say's all targets are 6"?
Another advantage of higher mag scopes is to have a much closer look at animals, see if it is a spike or doe, see if the animal might have abnormalities or wounds etc. Some higher mag scopes do not weigh much more than your 6x42 S&B.
edi
firstly one should find out how capable your rifle is. Possibly done on a bench. My preference is to get it below 1/2" on most rifles (others have other standards). Only once this is sorted one can judge results from different shooting positions. Otherwise it is like trying to measure something with a broken vernier.
Then of course it depends on what standards you try to achieve in the field. If you are a sunday shooter that say's no to 90% of presented shots due to the animal being a bit too far away, grass too high, wrong angle, too dark, can't see it properly (with the 4mag
Of course a, say 3-20 mag scope will give you way better possibilities than a 4 or 6 mag scope. 6 is way too much for quick action in dense cover...way too little if you are looking at a 150m head shot in high grass.... who say's all targets are 6"?
Another advantage of higher mag scopes is to have a much closer look at animals, see if it is a spike or doe, see if the animal might have abnormalities or wounds etc. Some higher mag scopes do not weigh much more than your 6x42 S&B.
edi