I have a couple of the Classic 2x10 Weaver scopes. I think mine were made in Japan. One on a bolt action .300 Savage, and another on 7MM Mag. They have held up in cold weather and got the job down. On this sub-freezing day it put meat on the table.
I think they are a far better glass then the ones I retired from the 1960’s. The guessing game is where are they manufactured now days? The scope pictured is a Weaver Classic 2x10.
I have been using scopes for about fifty-years and in the early years I had problems with scopes fogging up, and other issues. The two Weaver scopes I now have in use are problem free. To take the pictured buck I had to run about fifty yards at high elevation, spewing steaming breath into the cold air. The scope did not fog up as earlier models had, and the crosshairs showed clearly in the shadowed opening as the deer came into view.
I do like the Nikoplex crosshairs on the Nikon Buckmaster I purchased last year, and it is a good glass over all. The Nikon replace a favorite 2x7 Weaver (A true Weaver) scope, which I purchase in the late 60’s or early 70’s.
I also purchased a Burris 3x9FF II scope last year. It has the Ballistic Plex crosshair. The Burris was the wrong scope for the long action rifle I had purchases it for and would not fit in the current scope bases. I did a little switching around and mounted it on a Remington M760. Frankly I was a little upset with the FFII because of the mounting issue not knowing it was designed for short action rifles. I went to the Burris website and sent them an e-mail asking a few polite questions. Burris did not respond.
I am now happy with the FFII. I had a few days in the field with it last fall, which included a couple of days with a snow on the ground and the glass perform well.
I have pointed out this history because I spent a fair amount of time with the three scopes mention in 2007 starting in winter. I compared the Weaver scope mention against the Burris FFII and the Nikon Buckmaster. This included range time and hunting time. In my mind the Weaver scored very high, and it is hard to beat success in the field. The Weaver was clear and no indication of fogging in sub-freezing temperatures when being taken out of a warm pickup and exposed to cold air. In the dim early light it enhanced my view and the crosshairs must have special coating to stand out so well.
I prefer the Ballistic Plex and Nickoplex crosshairs to standard crosshairs because I hunt country that does off opportunities for longer range shooting. If Weaver offered a similar crosshair in the same price range it would be a battle between the Weaver and the Nikon. I do have an old 4X Weaver with the Range-Finder Reticle but the fifty some year-old glass does not match the new ones optically and is not fog proof.