Posted: Tue Jan 08, 2013 10:16 am
The OP's question was "Considering laying out the dollars for a March scope, anyone have one? And are they worth the dollars."
Short answer - yes.
Let me quote from a review I wrote on the 10 - 60x...
Quote
The 6.5 Shehane appeared at the end of its competitive life and was in need of some coaxing to get the last of its barrel working for me. This 6.5mm barrel had proven “difficult” during its last few outings and some serious reworking of the bedding had been a Christmas priority.
With temperatures on the range in the high thirties Celsius, and a swinging wind from over the right shoulder, it was always going to be a challenging day for scope testing. But this was the moment when all the words I’d written about the March suddenly made sense.
Without the 35mm Modifier Disk, the 600 metre target was a waving mess at 50 power; with the Modifier Disk screwed in a clear sight picture emerged. The ED lens was more than able to discriminate between mirage shifts and provided enough confidence to predict mirage induced elevation changes. The small exit pupil also means light changes are immediately obvious and can be factored into aim off. The bottom line was I could see things that other shooters couldn’t and I was in better control of the conditions than with my own scope.
Unquote.
I bought the scope and started to sell my NXS collection.
This decison was reinforced in a match last December on the final target at 800m. The NXS could only detect a red blur in the mirage but my March saw the whole target (even at 60x) and let me judge wind speed (no flags at this match) and confirmed aim off - went back to 30x and pulled the trigger. Got me 10 points and second place.
I will buy more March scopes.
Hope this helps.
Richard
Short answer - yes.
Let me quote from a review I wrote on the 10 - 60x...
Quote
The 6.5 Shehane appeared at the end of its competitive life and was in need of some coaxing to get the last of its barrel working for me. This 6.5mm barrel had proven “difficult” during its last few outings and some serious reworking of the bedding had been a Christmas priority.
With temperatures on the range in the high thirties Celsius, and a swinging wind from over the right shoulder, it was always going to be a challenging day for scope testing. But this was the moment when all the words I’d written about the March suddenly made sense.
Without the 35mm Modifier Disk, the 600 metre target was a waving mess at 50 power; with the Modifier Disk screwed in a clear sight picture emerged. The ED lens was more than able to discriminate between mirage shifts and provided enough confidence to predict mirage induced elevation changes. The small exit pupil also means light changes are immediately obvious and can be factored into aim off. The bottom line was I could see things that other shooters couldn’t and I was in better control of the conditions than with my own scope.
Unquote.
I bought the scope and started to sell my NXS collection.
This decison was reinforced in a match last December on the final target at 800m. The NXS could only detect a red blur in the mirage but my March saw the whole target (even at 60x) and let me judge wind speed (no flags at this match) and confirmed aim off - went back to 30x and pulled the trigger. Got me 10 points and second place.
I will buy more March scopes.
Hope this helps.
Richard