Meopta Optika5 4-20x50 review

Review: Meopta Optika5 4-20×50 BDC-3 rifle scope


The Meopta Optika5 4-20x50mm scope with BDC-3 reticle is a versatile offering for longer range shooting that won’t clean out your bank account. Like the rest of the Optika5 lineup, it blends solid European glass and manufacturing with practical features that most shooters will find useful. 

The 4-20x50mm version gives a bit more reach than its slightly smaller siblings yet still allows for good light transmission at the higher end of magnification range. 

Meopta Optika5 4-20x50 review
The larger objective lens and high magnification of this Optika5 give it low-light and long-range potential

While winding as low as 4x allows shooters to quickly acquire closer targets while hunting, the ability to wind up to 20x indicates this scope is pitched at shooters who want to push out past typical hunting distances. 

Ringing steel at 300 and 400 metres was very doable with this scope, even when the light was beginning to fade. 

Its 660 grams is a reasonable weight for a scope with this size objective and magnification range. I mainly used it on a CZ 600 American that I was testing at the time, which is a sporter-weight rifle. It excelled at the range and it did OK on the couple of hunts I used it on, but this scope would suit something a little heavier that would spend more time on the ground or on a bench than being carried. 

If you’re looking to save grams, you could consider the Optika5 3-15×44, which is about 60g lighter.

Meopta Optika5 4-20x50 review
It might be the largest of the Optika5 range, but the 4-20×50 is not excessive on a sporter-weight rifle

The turrets are like many of Meopta’s recent offerings with big, knurled caps that give a good grip, even with gloves on. The clicks are positive and repeatable, and with 60 MOA of adjustment in ¼ MOA increments, it’s exactly what you expect and need in this type of scope. 

Like other models in this range, you can loosen the indicator rings and reset them to zero after sighting in. There’s no zero-stop, but most applications where this scope is being used, it’s not a dealbreaker. 

The RD  BDC-3 reticle has indicator marks that will assist with long-range shooting without having to wind the turret, but keep in mind that the reticle is in the second focal plane, so the scale alters as you wind on magnification. 

The reticle is also illuminated which helped me when shooting at darker targets or when the light was diminishing. 

Meopta Optika5 4-20x50 BDC-3 reticle
The BDC-3 reticle provides holdover for range and windage. The many measurements it can help with are detailed in the Meopta reticle catalogue

There are six brightness settings with an ‘off’ mark between each setting, so you don’t need to scroll through a heap before you arrive on the one you want. 

Other reticles are also available if there is something else that tickles your fancy.

The parallax adjustment turret is the same style, with a smooth adjustment feel. It was spot-on in testing and being able to focus as close at 10 metres means it is useful for some rimfire and air rifle applications if that’s something you deem useful. 

The magnification ring has a smooth feel and is firm enough that it shouldn’t move accidentally. The throw lever helped with purchase here but if you feel it might interfere with clothing you can unscrew it easily enough. It’s unlikely that you’d be bouncing between 4x and 20x in a hurry but it’s nice to feel in control as you move through the zoom range.

Meopta Optika5 4-20x50 review
KNurled turret caps are very grippy. Illumination and parallax adjustment are in the left turret

Glass quality is as good as all the other Meoptas at this price point, giving me a clear picture, including times of lower light when hunting. If I felt I was struggling with optical clarity at 20x, winding it back a touch usually helped. I could still spot targets and aim confidently, which is the main thing. 

I had no trouble aiming at small dots for sub-MOA groups with the .243 CZ and found the reticle useful well beyond 200 metres.

For a scope that retails for less than $1000 with this sort of magnification, it’s hard to ask for more. 

Eye relief was consistent with the specs and I found myself comfortable behind the scope. Naturally, the full 20x magnification creates a narrow field of view so I had to concentrate at times to find the target but after spending a few hours behind the scope at the range, it became a piece of cake.

Meopta Optika5 4-20x50 review
The rubberised magnification ring can be complemented by the throw lever if you choose to fit it

Down at 4x magnification, the view is about five times wider and, at 9.3m at 100m, in the same range as other good scopes.

At $995, the Meopta Optika5 4-20x50mm sits in a competitive price bracket, but punches well above its weight. For hunters wanting to stretch their legs, varminters chasing smaller targets, or range shooters who won’t want to mortgage their house for decent glass, it’s a scope that delivers. 

You get rugged build quality, clear optics, practical reticle design and real-world capability in a package that leaves more money to spend on other important things. That’s not a bad deal at all.  

SPECIFICATIONS

  • Manufacturer: Meopta 
  • Magnification: 4-20x
  • Objective lens: 50mm
  • Main tube size: 25.4mm
  • Length: 345mm
  • Weight: 660g
  • Reticle: BDC-3, illuminated, second focal plane
  • Adjustment increments: ¼ MOA (.7cm @ 100m)
  • Adjustment range: 60MOA elevation and windage
  • Parallax adjustment: 9m to infinity
  • Field of view: 9.3-1.9m @ 100m
  • Eye relief: 92-88mm
  • Exit pupil: 2.5-12.5mm
  • Price: $995
  • Distributor: Winchester Australia

 

 

 


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Dylan Smith

Dylan Smith is a dedicated hunter and outdoorsman who is handy with everything from a rifle to a traditional longbow. A gearhead with an analytical mind, he's also someone who strives for perfection in what he does. He has contributed his monthly WilderLife column in Sporting Shooter magazine since 2017.

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