2Guns,
Funny you should ask. This comparison, on my bench, was
done with a whole battery of rifles, of which one has the Leupold VX II,
one the Bushnell 4200, and one a Monarch 5.5-16.5. There were
other scopes in the comparison test as well, but for the sake of
this discussion, we shall keep it focused on these three brands,
and models. Let me take one moment to speak to GB's comment
about "no proper comparison" of the VX II, and the 4200 Elite,
spec wise. This is true. But they are in the same price range.
As are all three of these scopes, I just listed. Now Jon, of the
OpticZone, and I have agreed to disagree on this analysis,
so many may feel the same as Jon, but my eyes gave the win,
easily to the Bushnell Elite 4200, for brightness, and clarity.
As Zachary has made a point, this is not always the most
heavily weighted factor in scope buying decisions, but
merely another data point. I like all three brands for different
reasons. On my .22-250, I really like the clarity, and brightness,
of my Bushnell 4200 Elite. On my 300 WSM, I really like the
generous eye relief of the Leupold. On my .25-06, I really like
the Nikon, for the smaller profile, with yet still good range of
powers of magnification. I was a little disappointed in the Nikon,
brightness wise, but clarity, is excellent. Eye relief is also a
bit short for this scope, and this rifle combination. I will
probably move it to a milder recoiling rifle, and look for
another scope for the .25-06. Since I started work on a warm
100 gr. Barnes load, I have had the scope just touch my eye brow,
a couple of times, and I do not need that in the back of my mind
when I am pulling the trigger. I can honestly say, that in the
group of $300 to $400 scopes, I have purchased in the past couple
of years, the Nikon was the only scope that did not meet my
expectations. Maybe they were too high, but none the less,
it did not meet them.
Squeeze