When I recently went looking for a scope for my old Marlin 336 one of my objectives was to find a scope, which I could mount close to the receiver. Something that was close to the old 4x scope I was replacing. I failed myself when I selected a scope. I purchased a Burris Fullfield II 2-7X35. http://www.burrisoptics.com/fullfield1.html#2x7x
The power ring on the rear eyepiece is huge and I had to use high rings to clear the receiver/hammer. I have shouldered the rifle a number of times with the scope on it and the tall mounts do not seem to create a problem, but I would like to get my cheek down lower when sighting. I was able to mount an old Weaver 2.5x7 lower on the receiver in the past.
I made the round of sporting goods stores after Christmas hoping to do some scope comparisons. They had a lot of scopes for long-range applications but little or no stock in the 2-7x slot.
I have a rifle with a Weaver V9 (3x9-38MM) scope on it and one with V10 (2x10-38MM) scope on it. I took this buck on the run using the 2x10-38MM scope.
I credit the scope to my success on that day. The buck was running in a pine shaded, brush covered area. I was leading the buck in my crosshairs. The cross hairs seemed to light up and easy to see. The low mounting of the scope enhanced my ability to quickly mount the rifle, and track the deer.
The ability to mount a scope low is an advantage not a disadvantage. While the mention scopes are not high priced, they do a good job in legal low light conditions. From my prospective the influx of large objective lens came from Europe where hunting after dark is legal. In the States I have hunted in legal shooting time starts at ½-hour before sunrise, and ends 1/2 –hour after legal sunrise. The 32MM, 35MM, and the 38MM objective scopes do a good job within legal shooting hours.
Using legal shooting hours and sometime beyond I went out back the other day with two scopes in hand. One was an of outdated 35+ year old Weaver 2.5-7x and the other was the new FFII 2-7X35. A tall spike Blacktail/California Mule deer mix was feeding in the failing light. The FFII outperformed the older scope. It seemed to light up the buck who was 65-yards away. I kept switching scopes and the FFII did a better job. I sure would have like to have a current Weaver 2.5-7 scope to compare. There has been a great improvement in lens coating over the years.
Down slope there was a bunch of does, and fawns in a more shaded area of oak canopy. The FFII did an outstanding job, and I believe the field of view was better. In the long run I think I will be satisfied with the FFII, despite my criticisms.
I have a 270 Model 700 with a 2x10-44MM scope on it. It is not a bad combination, but I think it slowed me down slightly this year when getting on a buck. The buck was successfully taken with one shot, but it felt awkward. The combination worked great on another buck at long range when the time frame was longer. For me the advantage goes to the 2x10-38 over the 2x10-44.
Past experience with the old Weaver 2.5x7 indicates that four hundred yards is my limit on deer and antelope. The advance lens coating on the FFII might push that range.