If you're still following along, Trapper 57, I'll offer this.......
Way back when, I bought a Super 14 Contender in 7 X 30 Waters (and 22LR, 22 Hornet, and .223) and scoped it with a nice long eye relief Leupold. It was a lot of fun to shoot. The problem was that it wasn't very much fun to hunt with.
For me, it was the long eye relief scope that spoiled the joy, more than anything else. You see, early in the morning, when the sun was creeping over the mountains low on the horizon, I found I couldn't see heck of a lot through my scope, due to the low angle sunlight and distance between my eyes and the occular lens. At the most critical time, when I really needed a sharp sight picture, I didn't have one at all.
It would seem to me that a "Scout Scope" set-up would be much like my scoped Super 14 Contender experience, so I wouldn't personally go that route.
I have a peep sight on my 336. I like the peep because it allows accurate aiming over the distances that I want to shoot, coupled with rapid target acquisition. It works about as well for me as low powered scopes do, but doesn't detract from the 336's fine shotgun-like balance and dynamic handling. With the peep, there are no lenses to fog, get blurred from driving rain or snow, or get scratched, or get dusty. A 336 fitted with a peep still handles and carries like a levergun should, and retains the scabbard-friendly profile the type is famous for. These things are important to me and handy to have.
So for me, my choice in sights for a 336 is peep all the way, with a low-power standard eye relief scope being a very distant second-place, open irons being out of the question due to my middle aged eyesight, and a "scout style" long eye relief scope set-up not even meriting consideration.
JP