Optics for 416 rigby

Nice. You dont see 1 1/2 fixed optics these days. For me that just takes care of the complication of old eyes and 3 sight planes associated with open sights.

Yes, I guess it would be more or less like open sights, with the benefit of having reticle and compensating old eyes
 
Open sites were used for back up hence the quick release rings.

But to your point, that is why I rescoped with 1x8 for next year.
So I dont have to remove the optic.

This makes complete sense to me. I can see the use of 1-8x if you push your .416 into PG-rifle role, and especially the Tiny Ten, although many are shot at closer range in dense cover.

I went a different route with the Blaser R8. I do not use the .375 H&H or .458 Lott barrels to hunt PG (save, as previously mentioned, the occasional impala for the pot on the way back to camp on an elephant hunt); I bolt on a PG barrel (.257 Wby or .300 Wby depending on what PG we hunt), onto which I have higher magnification optics.

Even at 8x, my 67 year cataracted eyes pain on tiny animals past 300 yards. I would have been hard pressed on this Klipspringer at past 400 yards in the vast openness of the Karoo with my older beloved 1-6x, and likely even 8x. I do not remember what magnification I used, but I certainly cranked up the Zeiss 4-16x. But of course it was on the .257 Wby barrel, not on the .458 Lott barrel ;)

klipspringer 2022 4x6.JPG



PS 1: and since most folks asking for advice on scoping a .416 have DG in mind, my recommendation on 1-6x being amply sufficient on a .416 was aimed at this application. Nothing wrong using a .416 to hunt the Tiny Ten, but it remains rather uncommon ;). But now that Zeiss, Swaro, Leica, etc. make outstanding 1-8x glass, there is certainly no downside to it, except price, which seemed to be a criteria for poor English man, hence the thought of a good used Zeiss 1-4x (which are very, very good glass by the way) :)

PS 2: one word of caution with the current trend of straight tube 1-6x, 1-8x low cost scopes intended for the AR 15 / AR 10 market. They are not built to resist DG caliber recoil. A friend of mine experienced this recently with a Sig Sauer scope identical to the one that performs otherwise brilliantly on my short AR 10.
 
Last edited:
I've been exclusively a Leupold guy for 50 years and yet to have a failure.

With that said I wanted something they don't make and something that's not as expensive as a rifle so I thought I would give this Sig Sauer 1x8 a try on my 416 Rigby Ruger rifle.

I'm going to start shooting with it next week.

I can't get myself to spend thousands on European glass. Maybe I'll regret it, maybe I won't.

View attachment 664396

See above PS 2 ftrovato. It would be great if you can report after 100 rounds or so. My friend's was on a .458 and that proved too much...
 
The Vortex Razor line of scopes handle the 416-both the Rem Mag and the Rigby. The Razor line is commensurate with their Leupold counterparts and both are in the same price range. The Razor Gen II HD-E 1-6X24 JM-1 BDC Rifle scope was designed for the big game and DG calibers and I have one on my own rifle. It never changed zero after 40 rounds, one Cape Buffalo, Sable, Hartebeest, and Golden Wildebeest.

 
I went with a hawke frontier 1-8x24 on my 375. So far I’ve been quite pleased. As good a glass as my leupolds and 4 full inches of eye relief.

I’d also consider a German precision optics 1.5-9x35

Hawke I believe is a UK company.

IMG_6428.jpeg
 
Trijicon AccuPoint 1-4x24 or 1-6x24 would be great.
couldn't agree more. put that scope on my CZ 550 416 Rigby and used it on Cape Buffalo, giraffe and sable. I never took it off 1x for all the shots taken. With the Talley QD rings it went back to dead on after taking it off for followup on the Cape Buffalo. Didn't really have to but going into the bush looking for him, not really knowing where he was, I thought going old school with the iron sights was the route to go
 
Me too. No option for those on the Ruger that I'm aware of.
I believe Alaska arms does but I fail to see the benefit. I’m right handed and prefer my levers on the right. Easier to check lever tension, when it’s slung over my shoulder I don’t have levers digging into my back or if I carry it across my stomach they don’t dig in to my belly…it keeps the left side of the rifle smooth…..thats just me
 

Forum statistics

Threads
59,000
Messages
1,275,473
Members
106,517
Latest member
NicolasWin
 

 

 

Latest posts

Latest profile posts

Get it right the 1st time - choose the Leopard specialists!
Finally! Been a month now, retired to Western Cape, SA! Living my best life!
Justin Peterson wrote on Jager Waffen74's profile.
Pics of the 375 nosier partitions appreciated. 801-455-9909
Preparing for the adventure of a lifetime. Looking forward to my 2026 Africa hunt with Van Wijk Safaris in South Africa.
 
Top