I purchased this scope for the very reasonable price of £15 and my old swat mini in exchange. The scope is brand new. The retail price is currently around the £100 mark.

The scope is well built and in the looks department puts many others to shame. The whole look and feel of the scope exudes a quality that pricier scopes struggle to do sometimes. All optics are coated and it has a large 50mm objective lens (although with the standard 1 inch tube I doubt there is a great benfit from this larger objective lens). This also doubles as the parallax focussing ring and for once the yard markers are bang on, ie 15 yards = 15yards and 35 yards = 35 yards and so on. It comes with a set of elasticated covers (poor show for a hundred pound scope) and a comprehensive set of instructions.

I mounted the scope onto my HW100KT, without any trouble. It was long enough to bridge the magazine slot and still retain my correct eye relief distance. I zeroed the rifle within 10 shots (after centering the finger tip adjustable turrets first).

What imediatley struck me was how clear and visable the reticle was. It is the MAP 6 version, consisting of thin lines leading to a mapped 6 x mil dot section in the middle of the scope (mapped = not equally spaced, but spaced specifically for the Hawke software mentioned later on). I always found my swat Mini 3-9x40 with 30mm tube (not a cheap scope) was clear, but the mil dots were too far apart. The same applies to my other scope, a AGS 3-9x40 Sapphire. Even on a 55 yard shot, my HW100KT was only 1.5 mil dots down. So a lot of shots had no true mark to aim for on the scope. That is most definatley not the case on the new Hawke scope. With the new scope the mil dots are spaced closer together and seemed to fall effortlessy into 3-5 yard increments. This has helped my shooting in HFT quite an amount.

There is a dioptre adjustment on the eye piece that is very smoothe in action, although I don't need it (yet!). The turrets are both finger tip adjustable with a very precise feel. They are covered with standard screw on covers (have to be careful to not cross thread these).

With the Parralax set to 35 yards the scope can focus down to around 5 yards on the lower magnifications but struggles a little at the higher end of the scale. (fixed parralax used in HFT).

The scope is designed with the Hawke BRC (Ballistic Reticle Calculator, a free download from Hawkes web site) software in mind with the scopes own settings on the program. The software enables you to put in things like velocity of the pellet, specific magnifications etc etc and then maps your point of impacts against your reticle. This can then be printed out and kept with you until you get used to the scope or need to change any of the variables. So far the software has been more or less spot on and has been quite a good aide to help me get used to the new scope.

Overall I am hugely happy with the scope from how it handles to the quality of the optics and casing. I would say it is superb value for money for a quality, spring rifle rated scope. The only let down being the crappy elasticated lens covers (flip up set already ordered).

I hope this helps any prospective buyers make up their minds.

Happy trails,

Chris.