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View Full Version : I trashed a great scope! ( Not on purpose,of course)



Budzilla 19
11-04-2022, 08:37 PM
A few mornings ago, while standing beside the Jeep, I was opening the hard case in which my Remington 700 was in, when the last latch popped open, and the whole rig, fell from waist high flat to the hard gravel road! Dented the Tasco scope on the rifle, in the dark it looked ok. So, after the days hunt was over, I went to the gun room, and, damn it, the scope was bent between the rings! I mean, on a hard angle, broken main tube. So, I’m out a heck of a target scope.
Be careful, and, from now on no more hard cases in the Jeep, for me, unless I open it on the tailgate first!
Yeah it was my fault.

Tasco still in business? Or am I just out of luck? Thanks, guys for any responses.
( new Bushnell Banner 6-14x 50 AO on the way)

nicholst55
11-04-2022, 10:32 PM
Um, yeah, they're still in business. Made in China by slave labor, available at Walmart.

https://tasco.com/rifle-scopes/

slim1836
11-05-2022, 03:17 AM
Yup, last 20 years employment felt like slave labor too. Poor folk have poor ways to keep on shooting, unless one drops their weapon on the ground. :drinks:

Slim

dverna
11-05-2022, 08:22 AM
Great scope and Tasco do not belong in the same sentence.

I had a Tasco on a hunting rifle. It slipped off a tree I had it leaning against and fell. Changed POI by 5" at 100 yards and cost me a deer at 275 yards two days later.

Replaced it with a Vortex.

For banging away at targets, there may be a place for a cheap scope, but I will never put one on a rifle that needs to do serious work.

IMO you will be wasting money getting it fixed.

fastdadio
11-05-2022, 08:41 AM
I'm very happy with my Vortex scopes and sights. Their life time warranty is tops. I had a Venom red dot fail at the range. I called them and explained the issue. A human answered the phone on the third ring. They sent me a new sight over night priority and it was in my mail box two days later with instructions to put the old one in the box and send it back postage paid.

Winger Ed.
11-05-2022, 11:31 AM
You should be happy with the Bushnell. It'll do OK.
However; once you look through and compare a Tasco with one of the high end scopes- there will be that 'Oh Wow' moment too.
There are good reasons why there is such a price difference.
That, 'You're just buying the name' on the high end ones is a myth.

I don't use anything but hard cases.
But I am careful about laying them flat before I open them.

Budzilla 19
11-05-2022, 11:58 AM
Slim1836, I agree, I did it. So now I have to upgrade this rifle.
dverna, mr Don, that was a cheap buy at a gun show type of thing. The serious weapons have Leupolds. But, it held true on the gun, so I’m just out the cost of an upgrade. I’m not having it fixed. Thanks for the info on Vortex.
fastdadio, thank you for the info on Vortex and the warranty.
Winger, I use the hard cases also, I just had a mental lapse, I guess, I normally open them on the tailgate, but, this time I didn’t! It was a stupid move on my part! And, I agree with the statement about quality on the high end stuff as opposed to the lower end stuff! All the rest are Leupold.

Thank you gentlemen, for your comments and suggestions!

Winger Ed.
11-05-2022, 12:45 PM
[QUOTE=Budzilla 19;5482343] I use the hard cases also, I just had a mental lapse, I guess,

You ain't the only one that does that.

I had a buddy who unloaded the truck at deer camp, leaned his hard case (with rifle inside) against the back of the truck,
got 'side tracked', thought everything was good,,,,,,,,,,,,,, and backed over it.

725
11-05-2022, 12:49 PM
Stuff happens. I stepped on the sights of my crossbow and thus wrecking them, I lost a hunt. Dropped my rifle on an elk hunt and jammed the muzzle full of mud. Would have been a lost day of hunting if it were not for the Atsko "Rapid-Rod" I had in my kit. Snaps together like a folding blind man's cane into a real good cleaning rod. That thing saved the day.

atsko.com

pworley1
11-05-2022, 12:53 PM
Sorry about your scope.

Eddie Southgate
11-05-2022, 04:14 PM
Sounds like an excellent excuse to buy a good scope. Not a fan of Tasco .

nicholst55
11-05-2022, 05:49 PM
At one time, Tasco did offer a few decent quality scopes. Nothing to compare with Leupold or even Burris, but for what they cost, they were decent. I haven't used or looked through one for many moons, but I'm confident that I really haven't missed much. I'm not a scope snob by any means, but I'm confident that there are significantly better scopes available for not that much money.

MaLar
11-05-2022, 05:53 PM
I put a new 35 Whelen together on a Savage 110.
Used a Tasco World Class WOHOO! Rolling my eyes.
Never even got it sighted in, the Whelen was to much for it.
Sent it in for repair I think it was Busnell?
Sent me a new one that I'm not putting on anything serious.

jonp
11-05-2022, 06:26 PM
Um, yeah, they're still in business. Made in China by slave labor, available at Walmart.

https://tasco.com/rifle-scopes/

Ive had a couple of Tasco scopes and while not my first choice they do the job on a deer rifle used once a year if a little dim compared to my Leopold Gold Rings or my Nikons. However, Simmons would be a choice over Tasco imho but Primary Arms makes good stuff. Have one of their scopes and several thousand rounds later no complaints

txbirdman
11-05-2022, 08:24 PM
Japanese Tasso World Class I’ve still got has been used on a 7 Mag and 300 Weatherby. That scope is over 30 years old and still works ok. Not a Leupold for sure but a good scope for the $69 I paid. I had read an article by Col. Charles Askins that endorsed the scope and I can’t say he was wrong.

robg
11-07-2022, 08:12 AM
bought two tasco silver moose 3x9x40 scopes cheap years ago for my 308 savage .first one cross hair broke after a couple of years ,so put the other one on ,after another year or two the cross hair started to rotate till it went x not+ .put a burris 3x9x40 scope on it 20 years later it is still fine .

kerplode
11-07-2022, 12:33 PM
Sorry you broke your scope. Look at a Vortex as a replacement. They are much better than Trashco and their mid-tier optics are reasonably priced for what you get.

But to put things in perspective, a high end Leupold or Nightforce optic (well and truly great scopes) likely wouldn't have even lost zero when dropped from waist high.

Yeah, they're expensive, but you know the rest...

GregLaROCHE
11-07-2022, 03:45 PM
I had a Tasco. It served my needs when I couldn’t afford a more expensive one.

Budzilla 19
11-08-2022, 01:07 PM
Greg, that was the idea behind that Tasco. It served its purpose well. Then I dropped it.

UPDATE: Found a 4-12 x40 Simmons I had stashed, mounted it, sighted in, ready to go!
Maybe Santa will gift me a 3.5-10 Leupold for Christmas!
I have been looking at the Vortex brand, ( nephew has several), might just go that way.
Bushnell is on hold till after deer season is over.
Retirement budget is tough to get used to! Good thing I stocked up earlier on important things!

Thanks for all your replies, gentlemen, as always I love this site!

buckwheatpaul
11-08-2022, 01:18 PM
Great scope and Tasco do not belong in the same sentence.

I had a Tasco on a hunting rifle. It slipped off a tree I had it leaning against and fell. Changed POI by 5" at 100 yards and cost me a deer at 275 yards two days later.

Replaced it with a Vortex.

For banging away at targets, there may be a place for a cheap scope, but I will never put one on a rifle that needs to do serious work.

IMO you will be wasting money getting it fixed.

The TASCO of today do not equate with TASCO of the 1970's. I've had them back in the day and they were very decent with a good life time warranty! The TASCO of today are made in China and true trash. The ones I had were on my rifles back in the day as was the one on my friends custom 300 Winchester Mag never faultered.....

slim1836
11-08-2022, 05:48 PM
Alas, I do not own any nice (as in expensive) scopes, all mine were bought as a cheap scope when needed to scope a rifle. That said, I put an old Tacso scope on my AR-15 and so far it has performed well after several 20 round boxes. I'm not a fan of AR's, prefer the old style rifles, especially military which are open sights.

I do have a Simmons scope that I mounted after the warranty ran out that was trash new out of the box. Good only for a shadow box now.

Since I no longer hunt, it just doesn't matter to me. Poor folk have poor ways.

Slim

Tripplebeards
11-08-2022, 08:44 PM
Even though Tasco’s are cheap I do love them! I also have a lot of Leupold mark fours and and a VX7 on the opposite $$$ spectrum. I have to say the tasco 2.5 x 10 varmint scopes are awesome for the $24.99 bucks I paid for them. I have one on my air rifle with over 3000 shots that hasn’t broke or lost zero. And I had one on my 35 Remington that I switched out to one of my rimfires and have another one on another rimfire. With that said I’m with everybody else though pick up a cheap Vortex and call it a day. The new Tasco’s crosshairs are like barn boards. I have a few they switched out for a varmint optic that had debris inside of it from the factory. They still work great though they just have extremely thick crosshairs. I can tell you the Sportsmans are better quality than the new world class. I have a 6 x 24 sportsman they sent me that is clear all the way to 24 power. I put it on my H&R single shot 223. They also sent a 4-12 sportsman to replace an old TV 4x that wasn’t under warranty anymore but they took care of it anyways….by accident. I put that on one of my 22s. They both are bright and crystal clear. They stopped making that 6 x 24 sportsman and I’d tell you that sure is a nice scope for cheap junk. I can see my shot placement hits at 200 yards with my h&R 223 that group just a hair over an inch. I always have fun in order a cheap tasco every once in a while just to see how well it does or doesn’t hold out. It was my first scope back in 1984 for my 30-06 in 4X. It’s all my dad could afford at the time and it was 29 bucks. That scope took many deer. I slipped one day dragging out an eight pointer and hit it on my forehead. The bell had a big dent but it still worked so I gave it to my cousin. He still uses it today!

nekshot
11-08-2022, 11:37 PM
I like the tascos from the 70’s. If a scope holds zero and does not fog up or get cloudy I use them. I get a bunch of scopes from rifles I bought and most of those are junk but a few are very good. Bushnells have always been good to me. I use Leopolds and Burris plus some Nikons for hunting but if the need to use a cheap scope came up I will gladly use the cheaper ones.

technojock
11-09-2022, 03:45 AM
After paying a small fortune to rebarrel my .22 K-Hornet, I figured it was time to get rid of the Barska scope on it. The Barska was always an OK scope but not a great one. So I ordered Vortex Crossfire scope to replace it. The Vortex is a good scope but in this case a bad decision. Ruger rifles only use Ruger rings and the Vortex was too short between the bells to fit the Ruger 77-22 Hornet.

I put the Vortex on my Rem 700 .243 Win and rolled it's 2-7 Redfield down hill to my AR15. I'd still like a better scope for the Ruger .22 K-Hornet but for now I'm OK with how all are working.

Tony

elmacgyver0
11-09-2022, 06:51 PM
I pretty much only have cheap scopes.
My guns rarely leave the house and to just look at cheap scopes work just fine.
I am now in my twilight years and only go squirrel or rabbit hunting when a dear friend of mine, half my age asks me to go hunting or fishing.
I really look forward to those outings.

Texas by God
11-09-2022, 09:13 PM
My brother paid me for mounting and sighting in Leupolds on two of his rifles by giving me the takeoff scopes. The Bushnell Sportview 3x9 cost $30 in 1980 and worked without issue on a 7mm magnum all these years for lots of deer and elk.
The Tasco Pronghorn 4x was on his first deer rifle- a 336 30-30. Same story never a problem.

Sent from my SM-A716U using Tapatalk

MostlyLeverGuns
11-10-2022, 11:36 AM
For inexpensive scopes, I've got a few Simmons on different rifles that work pretty well. A 4-16x40 on a marlin 336 32 special, a 3-9x32 on a Marlin 336 30-30, a couple others on rifles that do not beat up scopes. Mostly I go with Leupold for the rifles I carry a lot, the Leupold's are usually lighter, I really like the Burris Fullfield II's (2-7, 3-9, 4.5-14) but they are heavier. I liked Nikon but they quit making rifle scopes. Tasco's haven't held up to recoil, gone through a few of them. Early steel Weaver's will fog, altitude changes affect their sealing - 4000ft to 12000ft. The 19.95 4x32 Bushnell's from the 70's still work, I have a couple, but a couple cheap Bushnell variables have failed - form 20-30 years ago. If just dropping a rifle breaks your scope, the scope is not worth mounting.

Catmanran
11-17-2022, 07:30 AM
Yup 30 years ago friends had Tasco which they did real well with. I bought Leupold. The first Leupold I purchased somewhere around early/mid 1980’s. I had a similar experience. A few years ago I had my original 3-9 Leupold mounted on a 9 pound H&R 12ga slug gun. I opened my truck door and it slid out and onto the ground. It landed on the scope but it rode my leg down and didn’t just free fall the whole way. Well a nice dent between the front ring and objective. I carried my bow that morning and after hunting checked zero on the gun. It was still dead on.

Shopdog
11-17-2022, 09:04 AM
About 1980?.....

A shooting bud gives me a 3-12X50 world class Tasco that had been in a rifle,tip over incident. The eye piece was whacked.

That was my first scope "repair"... got that rascal STRAIGHTER than Tasco ever did,bwahaha. Been dinking around with repairs and modifications ever since so...

Saying Tasco is alright in my book.

P.S. got a straight 6X44 Tasco that has the best repeatability clicks (box testing) of ANY scope I ever been around. Read about scopes long enough and eventually you'll see the biases,no big deal just sayin it's a path. Not everyone is on the same trail.

curiousgeorge
11-24-2022, 06:11 PM
I started out with the Japan made Tasco World Class 3x9x40 from the late 1970's. It stayed on my main hunting rifles, first a Colt / Sako 308, and next a Howa 30-06 for around 30 years. Scope always held zero, never fogged, but eventually starting losing light gathering properties. Replaced it with a Burris on the 30-06, but still have it on an old H&R 30-30 and works great for shooting cast. I found the old Tasco made in Japan scopes to work very well. Still have 3 others of them on a 35 Whelen, a 308, and an 8mm Mauser. Went through several others made in the Philippines and Taiwan that did not hold up. Same can be said for the old Bushnells that were made in Japan versus the later models up through the mid 1990s.

murf205
01-05-2023, 12:49 PM
"I have been looking at the Vortex brand, ( nephew has several), might just go that way." I just checked MidwayUSA and they had Vortex Vanquish 3x9x40's for $99. If you are still in the market that fits a retirement budget. I know the feeling brother!

missionary5155
01-05-2023, 06:02 PM
Japan as always produced great glass
Early WW2 Jap war ships dould hit our ships at night long before our ships old see them. Superb Optics ! 2x as good as our best.
Radar saved our ship to ship battles.

Texas by God
01-05-2023, 09:09 PM
Tasco, Simmons, Bushnell, and Weaver are all owned and serviced by the same Vista Outdoors.
Send your broken Tasco in, they will probably replace it free- or cost you $10 for shipping.
Good for .22 rifles or “Brother in law” deer rifles!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

tctender
01-05-2023, 09:13 PM
Like some have already said the older Tasco scopes were good for the money. The new ones i have tried ( on .22 rifles) would not even work on them. The only one that i have bent tube on slid over on seat of my jeep to center between seats about 5-6 inches and bent the end of that Simmons 44mag scope. Cost me a nice buck that morning. Most of my scopes now are between two and five hundred dollars. Never had the money to buy the expensive ones. Never had any luck at all with the Simmons scopes.

beemer
01-05-2023, 10:10 PM
In about 1990 I ended up with a used Japanese Tasco 3 X 9. I put it on a #4 Enfield, hunted with it for years sometimes in bad weather with ice pegs hanging in it. It never failed or lost zero or fogged up and even with a few small dents. It finally got yellow looking inside and I replaced it but it still works. I have a couple Tasco's made in Taiwan that do fine. I don't hunt anymore and usually shoot on my 100 yd. range so I am satisfied with their performance.

I replaced the Tasco with a Burris Fullfield 3 X 9. It zeroed fine and I like the crosshair but the adjustments are extremely to hard to turn. It has a lifetime warranty so I am thinking about sending it back. I bought a Vortex Diamondback for my other #4, much better. I do have a couple more expensive scopes but they are all out numbered by steel tube weavers.

FergusonTO35
01-06-2023, 01:10 PM
I'm impressed with the Hawke Vantage series scopes, they are about the only choice for a decent new 2-7x32 scope that costs less than Leupold nowadays. Got one on my Zastava .223 and it works great. Buddy on another forum has the same scope on his 1895 Guide Gun with stout handloads and it has never let him down. For the money, Burris Fullfield II is the only way to go, sometimes you can catch them on sale for a bit more than a c-note. I honestly think they are better scopes than anything that costs less than a Leupold VX-3. Unfortunately they only come in a couple of different versions, none of which are compact.

farmbif
01-06-2023, 11:07 PM
these days its pretty hard to beat what vortex has to offer with the warranty they actually stand behind. there are loads of new scope brands with all the high quality glass being made in the phillipines and other places now a day. but if I were after another scope I would look at vortex, leupold and Burris in that order unless I could find a Zeiss or night force that was on clearance or something.

beemer
01-06-2023, 11:37 PM
I'm impressed with the Hawke Vantage series scopes, they are about the only choice for a decent new 2-7x32 scope that costs less than Leupold nowadays. Got one on my Zastava .223 and it works great. Buddy on another forum has the same scope on his 1895 Guide Gun with stout handloads and it has never let him down. For the money, Burris Fullfield II is the only way to go, sometimes you can catch them on sale for a bit more than a c-note. I honestly think they are better scopes than anything that costs less than a Leupold VX-3. Unfortunately they only come in a couple of different versions, none of which are compact.

The Burris I put on my #4 was a Fullfield II, The adjustments are even hard to turn with a good screwdriver. Other than that I like the scope, especially for the money spent. Have you experienced this with a Burris ?

farmbif
01-07-2023, 08:19 PM
growing up I had great respect for Burris scopes, that changed in about 1997 when I got a new full field to put on a 700cdl in 270. when I opened the box I was supervised and disappointed that it said made in phillipines on it. I just assumed they were all made in USA like leupold. getting it zeroed was nearly impossible. it has since gone down the road. but ive got a 2.5-7 eer on a Redhawk that is great, a made in usa signature 2.5-10 that is also a fantastic scope and a 2.5-10 euro diamond that is a very very nice scope. I got one of the TAC 4-14's when they were closing them out at less than 1/2 price and so far so good. as far as 2-7 scopes I thought the leupold vx2 was good until I got a vortex diamondback for a 22, wow, what a fantastic scope

rbuck351
01-08-2023, 03:08 PM
The Tasco scopes made in Japan were not bad scopes. Not in the same class as the high end scopes but not bad. The China made Tascos are worth about as much as you pay for them. Not what I would want on a rifle I depended on to bring home the bacon.

Streetwalker
01-08-2023, 03:44 PM
My serious hunting rifles are all Leupold scope equipped but I do have a number of knock- around, beater rifles that have Japanese Tasco scopes on them. Years ago, before I could afford Leopold or Redfield scopes, Japanese Tasco's served me well and I never had a problem with them. I still pick them up from time to time at gun shows and put them on whatever suits my fancy at the moment. They still work fine despite their age. Besides, this county I live in [Lassen] has more rocks than any place on earth and if I am going drop a rifle or trip over a rock and bust something, I surely don't want it to be one of my serious rifles with a Leopold on it. Beater rifles with Japanese Tasco's have a place here in God's rock garden!

jonp
01-08-2023, 03:52 PM
IDK, I have a couple of Tasco scopes and while not up to my Nikon's or Leopolds they are ok for occasional use or that deer rifle you pull out for 2 weeks a year. Not sure of all the hate, here. I used one 4x on my wife's new Savage 243 to punch a .85in group.

jonp
01-08-2023, 03:54 PM
My serious hunting rifles are all Leupold scope equipped but I do have a number of knock- around, beater rifles that have Japanese Tasco scopes on them. Years ago, before I could afford Leopold or Redfield scopes, Japanese Tasco's served me well and I never had a problem with them. I still pick them up from time to time at gun shows and put them on whatever suits my fancy at the moment. They still work fine despite their age. Besides, this county I live in [Lassen] has more rocks than any place on earth and if I am going drop a rifle or trip over a rock and bust something, I surely don't want it to be one of my serious rifles with a Leopold on it. Beater rifles with Japanese Tasco's have a place here in God's rock garden!

Wow. I came into Susanville once from the east with a load of sheetrock from Empire, NV going somewhere I forget. If I remember right the road was narrow blacktop with no shoulder and my truck took most of it then had a little dirt mixed in. Always be wary of locals "shortcut but good road" info, lol. I thought it was a very nice area.