Bronze Supporter
- Messages
- 3,521
- Reactions
- 7,482
I have been after a higher power scope for my heavy barrel 223 Wylde AR I built, but really didn't want to lay out the $900 plus I figured it would take to get the glass I was after. I have been reading about Riton for a couple years now and it has been mostly all positive, so I took a chance on the rt-s mod 7 4-20x50 model. I paid $399 before tax through amazon with free shipping. There has been some slightly better deals on this scope but they are all out of stock. Riton is a US (Arizona) based company owned and operated by law enforcement and military vets. They claim to design and test all their products in Arizona. Most of the manufacturing seems to be in Japan using Japanese glass. Some of their lower tier stuff may be assembled in China, or was assembled in China using Japanese glass. All recent press seems to indicate all Japanese manufacturing throughout their line up. In either case they claim to QC every piece back here in the US. The Model 7 line is HD/ED glass and just my initial impression it is very clear. The box it came in was quite large and very protective. Besides the scope it comes with sunshade, flip up caps, quick start user manual , lens cloth and some warranty info. The use manual is pretty basic but is well written being clear and to the point. Full manual can be obtained from their website. Speaking of the warranty it is as good as anything in the industry. They claim to have a no questions asked warranty and will replace rather than repair for a quick turn around. Their only disclaimer is for unauthorized repair or alteration or deliberately worn products whatever that implies.
I mounted it on my AR using a 30mm Warne one piece skeleton mount.
The eye relief is very generous even at full power allowing me to mount it further forward than many scopes. They claim 3.9" in the specs and I believe it. Exposed turrets are the type you lift to adjust and remain locked when pushed in the down position. They are both 1/4 moa. Resetting turrets to zero is easily accomplished once rifle is zeroed. Total adjustment is claimed to be 91 moa. The turrets adjustment is firm but smooth with audible and very distinct detents.
The side adjust parallax is marked 10yds to infinity and is firm but smooth with no detents. It seemed to focus well at all distances even close in (20' or so). The reticle focus is also firm but smooth and brought the reticle in fine focus both wearing gasses and with my naked eyes.
The reticle is a duplex style with 2moa hash marks on both the horizontal and vertical (below crosshair) fine portion of reticle. This reticle is simple and uncluttered and well suited for hunting. The fine portion of the duplex reticle is .2moa which I thought might be too thick for smaller varmints but with such clear glass and being a SFP reticle I think it will suffice.
I took out my 6.5 CM with Swaro z5 3.5-18x44 glass on it and compared to the Riton with both on 18x. Surprisingly the Riton held it's own against the Swarovski glass in this somewhat limited trial. I say this because I could only look a couple hundred yards out the garage door as. it was a foggy rainy day. A different venue and conditions will be needed to really do a proper comparison. All in all I am happy so far and it looks like the Riton will be a good value. It is a bit heavy (31 oz) for a lighter field rifle but no worries on this build as she is already quite portly and mostly a bench fixture with some prone thrown in. I will reserve final judgement until I can shoot it in different conditions at different ranges. I will update as I shake it out. Here is a spec sheet on the scope from Riton's web page.
I mounted it on my AR using a 30mm Warne one piece skeleton mount.
The eye relief is very generous even at full power allowing me to mount it further forward than many scopes. They claim 3.9" in the specs and I believe it. Exposed turrets are the type you lift to adjust and remain locked when pushed in the down position. They are both 1/4 moa. Resetting turrets to zero is easily accomplished once rifle is zeroed. Total adjustment is claimed to be 91 moa. The turrets adjustment is firm but smooth with audible and very distinct detents.
The side adjust parallax is marked 10yds to infinity and is firm but smooth with no detents. It seemed to focus well at all distances even close in (20' or so). The reticle focus is also firm but smooth and brought the reticle in fine focus both wearing gasses and with my naked eyes.
The reticle is a duplex style with 2moa hash marks on both the horizontal and vertical (below crosshair) fine portion of reticle. This reticle is simple and uncluttered and well suited for hunting. The fine portion of the duplex reticle is .2moa which I thought might be too thick for smaller varmints but with such clear glass and being a SFP reticle I think it will suffice.
I took out my 6.5 CM with Swaro z5 3.5-18x44 glass on it and compared to the Riton with both on 18x. Surprisingly the Riton held it's own against the Swarovski glass in this somewhat limited trial. I say this because I could only look a couple hundred yards out the garage door as. it was a foggy rainy day. A different venue and conditions will be needed to really do a proper comparison. All in all I am happy so far and it looks like the Riton will be a good value. It is a bit heavy (31 oz) for a lighter field rifle but no worries on this build as she is already quite portly and mostly a bench fixture with some prone thrown in. I will reserve final judgement until I can shoot it in different conditions at different ranges. I will update as I shake it out. Here is a spec sheet on the scope from Riton's web page.
Last Edited: