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FSI 4-16x50 / 6-24x50 Rifle Scope w/Front AO Adjustment, Red/Blue/Green Illuminated Reticle with Picatinny Scope Rings

Free shipping on orders over $29.99

$59.99

$ 29 .99 $29.99

In Stock

About this item

  • Parallax adjustment/front AO feature allows for fine-tuning of target image, excellent for long range hunting and shooting.
  • Red, Green Illuminated reticle.
  • Quick tactical zero locking/resetting target turrets for windage and elevation adjustment at 1/4 moa per click.
  • 6061 T6 aircraft grade body 1 inch tube.
  • Package includes: 4-12x50 Rifle Scope, Scope rings (fit Picatinny rail), Flip up len covers, Battery (CR2032).


Package includes: Rifle Scope, Picatinny Scope rings, Flip up len covers, Battery (CR2032).

Product Description
Objective: 50mm
Magnification: 4x-16x
Tube Diameter: 1 inch
Reticle Focal Plane: Second Focal Plane
Parallax Setting: 15 to Infinity
Reticle Type: Mil-Dot
Field of View (ft @ 100 yds): 15.0-4.0
Eye Relief (in): 3.3
Exit Pupil (mm): 8.0-2.0
Weight (oz): 26.2
Length (in): 16
Battery: CR2032 3V
W/E Click Value @ 100 yds 1/4

Model:6-24x50AOL Model:6-24x50AOL
Objective: 50mm
Magnification: 6x-24x
Tube Diameter: 1 inch
Reticle Focal Plane: Second Focal Plane
Parallax Setting: 15 to Infinity
Reticle Type: Mil-Dot
Field of View (ft @ 100 yds): 15.0-4.0
Eye Relief (in): 3.3
Exit Pupil (mm): 8.0-2.0
Weight (oz): 26.2
Length (in): 16
Battery: CR2032 3V
W/E Click Value @ 100 yds 1/4


J. Malmquist
Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2017
So, I'm not a novice by any stretch, but not a professional shooter either. I'll try and give my best feedback possible.Background: I have done a good deal of long range (out to a 1,000 yards) on open range in Texas. I have used 3 primary rifles when doing it...a .338 Lapua (Savage Tactical Bolt Action), a .300 Win Mag(Savage Tactical Bolt Action) and a .308 Remington 700 custom build. The .338 and the .308 have Nightforce 25x scopes on them, top of the line, and I won't argue that point. I get it that guys who are sponsored, use Vortex and all kinds of other scopes, but guys that are in combat as Snipers, like Chris Kyle, seem to always have NightForce on the top of their rig......which is top of the line for me.Setup: The .300 Win Mag is a Savage 110 with a heavy build. a Surefire Muzzle Break (and a twist on Can....which is awesome), with this FSI Sniper on top of it now. The rifle is super tame by the way, you can shoot all day, and not have a sore shoulder, my 13 year old got behind it and hit 750 yards 3 hits in a row.Getting it on paper and on at 100: I don't have a bore laser, so I eyeball it. Set it in the lead sled, and get the 100 yard centered down the barrel, then put the scope on the center. Moved to 50 yard target for first shot, was on medium to small paper target first shot. Centered it next shot, and moved to 100. In a couple shots, I was centered the red, dead on. Didn't take much, I was happy with the scope responsiveness to getting it zero'd.Moved to 500: On a Manhole cover hanging 500. This was on the computer, I was using older ammo on the .300 Win Mag to get rid of it on paper. I had some ballistics off. Switched to Hornady, new ammo that was in the App, and Flap...on the manhole first shot. Crosswind was about 2 moa, and up and down, so I stayed on the manhole for 5 shots, but it moved around on it a little.Moved to 750: With the Hornady, I was first shot at Manhole cover at 750. 3 more on target, and my 13 year old first shot and a couple more. Never missed.I moved it back to 100, and bam it was on zero. That's the test for me. I'd like to use this some more to prove out consistency, but for moving out and back, it hit zero. Turrets were quickly adjusted to put them on zero for easy read and set. I need to twist it down, so I know from dead stop, how many turns up gets me to the "zero", on the Night Force there is a zero stop, so you can just spin it down. I'll say, one negative about a true zero stop.....if you have different ammo, that may need to go back into the zero a little, you can't.Zoom: Zoom was good, no issues at all, came into the target what I would expect for 24x, and it makes it very, very useful for long range. For short range, you're shooting at hairs, not body parts, ha.Glass: Here is the difference - I'ts good on zoom half way to 3/4 of the way in.....but when you get to 24x it's a little sensitive. I got some "reflection" if you will, where there looked like light fading the picture. If I moved ever so much, I could get a pretty color regular picture, but it was very sensitive, the sweet spot was miniscule. I will say, it didn't effect performance, even with a little fade/brightness in the scope, it was still dead on.Zoom out at all, and it was a really, really nice sight picture. I'm curious, in general this is a 1" tube, the Nightforce is a much larger, I'm thinking even bigger than 30mm, so I can see why.Summary: This scope is excellent, even on a long range rig. I was hammering targets out to 750, and it was pretty easy to do. I'm highly impressed. This is NOT a Nightforce scope, so if you have to have the very best, then you can get better. I give the Nightforce a 5 for the price range, I give this a 5 for this price range ..... $2,400+ vs. $104 for this FSI. If it's direct competition, it's NF 5 vs FSI 3 .......but.....that isn't a slap in the face to FSI. I was impressed.NOTE: I have NOT put this to the endurance testing that I know and trust Nightforce can withstand. I'm not even going to try, because for $104 I don't care. This FSI Sniper 6-24x is really, really cool. For the price.....wow, I was BLOWN AWAY. Not exaggerating. If you're going to get a long range scope for cheap, this is awesome.The other reason I wanted this.....For my 13 year old, this takes a lot out of the equation. Hitting a deer, there is no running, it is pin point accurate, and they drop, that's one of the main reasons for having such magnification power on a rifle for me. I like the long range, but for deer, I can take this to 20x and my boys hammer the target. It's also why I have heavy rifles and muzzle breaks.
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on September 10, 2016
The package was damaged upon arrival. Needless to say the scope was damaged as well. Return to sender!
Doc
Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2013
I ordered one of these because I just couldn't resist the price. Was sceptical to say the least, but I figured I could always use it on my old CZ-513 .22LR if it didn't work out on my Rem 700 .30-06. Received it quickly and in perfect condition. I was very hesitant pulling my $800 Zeiss Conquest 4.5x10-44 off my .30-06 but I just couldn't resist the 24 magnification. I also thought it looked cool with the sun shade attached. however, I jumped in and put it on the .30-06 not even knowing if it could handle the recoil. One of the other reviews said they used it on a .308 and .338LM so I thought I'd trust them and try it myself. It comes with a nice set of rings (4 screws per ring). Nice and rugged for a good grip. In fact, everything you need is in the box.So I setup a target at 25 yards and bore-sighted it using a rifle holder to get started. Popped off the first round and then tried to adjust the turrets. Whoops, forgot that there are turret locks. These work very well when you remember to use them. Also remember to re-lock them when your adjusted. One more shot for final windage alignment and I was literally punching though the same hole repeatedly. I put 20 rounds through to see if it would hold its zero or just break internally from the recoil (180 grain Rem Core-Lokt flat bottom). I will say that I was blown away. So then I moved the target to 100 yards and spent the next 20 rounds just trying to find the paper. I popped the last round into the 25yard target to to make sure nothing had come loose or broken inside the scope. Nope, dead bullseye again. I had no idea where my shots were going because my backdrop is a snow covered berm. I got pissed off and called it quits for a while since I was wasting a buck a bullet and getting nowhere.After taking a break I came back with 165 grain Core-Lokt Boat Tails and tried again. This time I finally hit the paper on the first shot and could see I was hitting 8 inches high at 100 yards. That's a lot when I was expecting about 3 inches high. I had hit the white paper at the top of the target. I brought the elevation down using the quick visual adjustment method (moving crosshairs up to meet up with the actual hole). After that I was punching 1 MOA repeatedly. The excellent thing was that you didn't even have to walk out to your target to see where you were hitting because the 24 magnification brings you in close enough to easily see your results (I use the black targets that show orange when penetrated).That did it for me. Excellent. So this scope actually works on my .30-06 and I've put about 100 rounds through it so far and it's still holding its zero perfectly. So far so good. Here's the funny part... now I've put the $800 Zeiss on my old $300 CZ-513 .22LR. What's even funnier is that I'm now seriously considering buying another one of these scopes to replace the Zeiss on the CZ-513 and mothballing the Zeiss. Now, all you serious scope gurus can scream at me all you want, but this scope it actually awesome, and at this price point, if it breaks in a couple of years I'll just toss it away and buy another one.One wish - a bit more eye relief for larger caliber guns would be nice. However, there is still enough to avoid scope-kiss, but not as much room as my Zeiss.Another bonus is the ability to set your depth-of-field by turning the Objective Lens from 15 meters to Infinity. Really helps when shooting shorter distances.One unusual thing: They provide red, green and "blue" powered reticle. Not sure what Blue is good for, but it's there.Green powered reticle consumes more power than Red. Something to keep in mind for battery life.My highest recommendation. If my wife wouldn't kill me I'd buy half a dozen of these and keep them in stock for future rifles or in case they break for whatever reason.Cheers, RandyLatest update - I just bought a second one after all.Even later update. April 2013 - just bought two more for a total of 4. They are working flawlessly and now going to be putting one on my .338 LM. This will be a real test of durability.Latest update May 2013 - don't use it on a 338 Lapua (or any 338 for that matter). It was below freezing and my shots shifted everything inside. On the upside, the company replaced it free of charge. I only had to pay for the shipping back. I thought Voted was the only company to provide this type of warranty, so I was pleasantly surprised when they replaced it. I only had to pay for the shipping to send it back after they provided my with an RMA number.So that's my warning.