What happens when you work at one of the best known brands in sporting optics and that company decides to get out of the rifle scope market? That happened to Jon Allen and Jon LaCorte at Nikon. Rather than join SIG, Bushnell, or another optics company, Jon and Jon started Tract Optics.
Tract quickly made a name for itself among competition shooters. Not surprising given the Toric is made with the same German Schott glass as other top tier brands like Leupold, Schmidt & Bender, and Zeiss (Schott is owned by Zeiss by the way). Another key feature in its popularity: a street price around a grand. While not cheap, this is less than a Vortex Razor, and significantly less than a Leupold Mk5 or a Zeiss S3.
Some have called the Tract Toric, a Zeiss S3 clone. While physically, I do not think they look all that similar, their performance specs are. So perhaps calling it a “clone” is not a derogatory statement. Both share an impressive 160 MOA of elevation adjustment, unusually tall turrets, and excellent fit and finish in their construction.
Tract sent me a Toric 4-25×50 MOA ELR to test and evaluate. My first impression was positive. The Toric sports a striking graphite grey color, excellent fit and finish, oversized turrets, and butter smooth knobs and rings. In my range testing, I found the glass to provide a bright, detailed image with little or no chromatic aberration at maximum magnification.
Ask 10 different people what they think about a reticle and you’ll get 20 different opinions. I like Christmas Tree reticles even though I have no business using them, since I mostly shoot 100yrd rimfire. I prefer less busy, finer reticles for shooting bullseye targets, so the Toric fits my style. The Toric MRAD ELR reticle has a a cleaner layout than a Leupold Mk5 PR2, while providing more subtensions in a tall column below the Christmas tree. And unlike the Zeiss S3 MOAi reticle, the entire column is illuminated and not just the center mini-cross.
The Toric box includes a sun shade, Allen keys, and a an easy to install zero stop ring. The scope comes with very basic plastic lens caps for shipping protection but these aren’t sturdy or secure enough for field use. Perhaps to make up for this, in the shipping box Tact included a sight in target and a branded chamber flag as swag. I asked Tract about the caps and they said they were planning on upgrading the caps to a silicone bra style in the near future.
An odd feature I noticed was what I thought to be a throw lever socket on the magnification ring. After contacting Jon LaCorte at Tract and asking him how to remove this and what levers fit it, he told me that cap was the Argon gas fill port. They recommend using clamp on polymer throw levers that can break away if and not shake and damage the scope internals, which can happen with screw in levers. Like better lens caps, I hope they include said polymer lever in future packaging of this scope.
Socioeconomics aside, $1000 is not a small sum, but in a world where a top-tier PRS/ELR scope costs a couple grand, a brand new Tract Toric is a deal by comparison. To keep costs down, Tract uses a direct to consumer model so do not sell through stores (though they are available from their store on Amazon).
ONLINE RETAIL SOURCES
Tract Optics https://tractoptics.com/riflescopes/toric-34mm-elr-rifle-scopes
Amazon #commission https://amzn.to/3R6TN6r
RESOLUTION
Group: -1
Element: 6
MANUFACTURER SPECS
TORIC UHD 4-25X50 34mm MOA ELR FFP Rifle Scope
Magnification: 4-25x
Objective Lens Diameter: 50mm
Eye Relief (inches): 3.6 – 3.8
Exit Pupil: 12.5-2
Field of View (Low Power/High Power in feet @ 100 yards): 29.2 / 4.7
Relative Brightness: 2
Twilight Factor: 35.3
Diopter Range: +2/-3
Ultra High-Definition (ED) Glass: Yes
Internal Gas Purged: Argon
Length (inches): 13.5
Weight (ounces): 39
Elevation Adjustment Range (MOA): 160
Click Value (MOA): .25 MOA
Turret Lock: Yes
Turret Zero Stop: Yes / Multi Rotational
Tube: 34mm (one piece)
Reticle Type: Glass Etched MOA ELR “Christmas Tree”
Coatings: Fully Multi-coated
Illuminated Reticle: Yes
Illuminated Reticle Battery Type: CR2032
Illumination Battery Life: 360 Hours at Medium Intensity
Recoil Shock Endurance: 1,000g
Operating Temperature Range: 158°F to -1.4°F
Parallax Setting: 15 yards to Infinity
Color: graphite
Reticle Focal Plane: 1st
Eyepiece Outside Diameter: 1.7 inches
Objective Outside Diameter: 2.36 inches
Mount Space: 6.4 inches
Sunshade Included: Yes / 3 Inch Sunshade
Waterproof Depth (meters): 3
Country of Origin: Japan