Weaver rifle scopes have been around for rather a lot of time. As a matter of fact they were introduced as far back as 1930 and ever since Weaver has become a very well known brand name in the world of hunting and shooting. Like a lot of other rifle scope companies over the years Weaver has felt the pinch of contest in spite of a long and conventional history of developing quality products. Weaver itself was sold on in the late 1990s and shortly afterwards was purchased by a company called Meade who made it their mission to modernize the entire Weaver scope range.

For galore years the most usual Weaver rifle scopes have been the 330 and 400 which are well known for delivering splendid quality and performance without costing the earth. The Grand Slam scopes were introduced as share of the Weaver/Meade merger and this step took Weaver scopes to a never-before-seen level. The Grand Slam line of scopes includes assorted choices including variable power scopes such as the 1.5-5x32mm and the 3-10x40mm as well as the 3.5-10x50mm and the 4.5-14x40mm scope. The 6-20x4mm AO variable power and the fixed power 4.75x40mm are also available in the new Grand Slam lineup.

These new scopes are competent of taking a beating if the circumstance calls for it. Designed with tubes that are fictitious from aircraft quality aluminum, the scopes are 1″ in diameter with lenses crafted from camera quality glass. Multi-coatings are provided to further reduce glare while elevation and windage adjustments may be clicked and conducted with no use of special tools required – just making life having little impact for shooters everywhere.

It seems that a lot of thought and planning has gone into the new line of Weaver scopes as they’ve been designed to genuinely consider the shooter. The exterior is provided with a rubberized fast focus ring as well as a sure-grip exterior that may effortlessly be handled even when you’re wearing gloves. To further prove the quality of this new lineup, Meade has provided the Grand Slam line with full fogproof, waterproof and shockproof capabilities. A fixed lifetime warranty is likewise offered, with repair or substitute of any wrong scope at no charge as long as the scope is still owned by the basi owner.

Weaver has been supplying high quality, high performance rifle scopes for a good deal of years and this doesn’t appear to be when it comes to to alter anytime soon. The new Grand Slam range shows that Weaver has their sights with resolute determination fixed on the future by providing reasonably priced scopes with a outstanding feature set. You may suppose to see Weaver merchandise on the market for a long time to come.


1 High Ring With Weaver

Precision machined from aircraft-grade aluminum alloy with anodized black matte finish. Friendly hex screws with retention features and full length locking plate to guarantee easy installation and secure fit. Fits all picatinny/weaver rails.

1 High Ring With Weaver

1 High Ring With Weaver Image

1 High Ring With Weaver

1 High Ring With Weaver Photo

1 High Ring With Weaver

1 High Ring With Weaver Photo

1 High Ring With Weaver

1 High Ring With Weaver Pic


Most helpful client reviews

5 of 5 humans found the following review helpful.
4Does the occupation nicely.
By mixmasterb
These scope rings are great at what they do for the price. They are good looking too. I got them to replace a lot of low rise rings. It elevates 3/4 of an inch on a flat top picatinny rail. They hold tight nicely after putting them trough 300+ rounds on an M&P15-22. You might need to tighten the thumb screws at times if you only hand tighten them like how I do. If the thumb screws were the circular ones with grip, I’d give them 5 stars.

4 of 4 humans found the following review helpful.
5High Power Scope Rings
By Gregr
Good scope rings for 9X16X40. High sufficient to fit scope and not obstruct function of bolt action or focus mechinism in front of scope.

3 of 3 persons found the following review helpful.
4Nice, but do not overtighten
By Sean Grider
The greatest drawback to these is that you may overtighten the screws and sheer the head from the threads. Ive done it. One you hit that point they are useless. BUT! They give you a spare screw. BUT! You cannot remove the old threads unless you have numerous good tools. Just be careful with the tightening and you will have to be fine.

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