Athlon Heras SPR 6-24×56

with No Comments

At Shot Show this year, Athlon showed me their new Heras line of “cross-over” scopes. These scopes were designed to appeal to hunters and target shooters. The 10 yrds minimum parallax piqued my interest (for airgun matches and dispatching the occasional field rat in my backyard this distance comes in handy). A few months later, they finally released the Heras and they offered to send me one to test and evaluate. Seeing as they market this scope to hunters, I requested the MOA version but they also make it in MIL.

I didn’t fully appreciate the differences between this and my Midas Tac until I got it in my hands and took it to the range. The glass isn’t as good as the Midas Tac (not surprising given the Hera’s 25% lower price point). I appreciate that Athlon listened to complaints and added illumination that the Midas Tac is missing. But the only thing lit is the center dot, which isn’t daylight bright at max. Moreover the dot is too small to even see at low magnfication, so the the illumination feature is a wasted effort.

The Heras’ turret design differs from Athlon’s other scope line with much more data information, larger footprint, and aggressive knurling. It’s a marked improvement over the Midas and Helos in design and ergonomics. The elevation has a respectable if unremarkable 70 MOA of elevation adjustment.

The windage is lockable (pull up to unlock) which is a nod to hunters who prefer to use subtension for cross-wind compensation. Both turrets are resettable for zero. The elevation turret features Athlon’s easy-to-use and solid zero-stop, for competition shooters.

The illumination dial has an OFF between the 6 levels of brightness. Unfortunately in the MOA SFP version of this scope, only the tiny central dot (0.3 MOA) is illuminated; which is not daylilght bright and too small to use as a target dot at low magnfication. The MIL SFP version of this scope has the APRS8 reticle which illuminates the center cross which offers a more visible illuminated reference. The FFP version of the HERAS has APRS9 reticle which illuminates the entire Christmas tree.

One feature I appreciate in the HERAS is its usability at short range. The paralax focus goes down to 10 yrds., which is a boon for NRL22 and airgun shooters. When doing rodent control on your property, its rare to find varmints beyond 10 yrds.

I found the optics to be on par with Helos, which it likely shares its glass as well as price tier in Athlon’s lineup. The image was sharp with a modest amount of chromatic fringing at maximum magnification which hampers its clarity and detail at higher magnifications. I was still able to make out .22 cal size holes on plain paper at 100 yrds.

Overall the scope seems to check all the boxes for both hunters and long range shooters.

ONLINE RETAIL SOURCES

Optics Planet
https://shrsl.com/47gd3

USAF-1951 RESOLUTION TEST

ELEMENT: 3

GROUP: -1

MANUFACTURER SPECS

POWER: 6-24X
OBJ. LENS: 56 mm
TUBE SIZE: 30 mm
TURRETS: Exposed / Locking Windage
EYE RELIEF: 3.7”
FOV @100Y: 19.9-5.12 ft
CLICK VALUE: 0.25 MOA
ADJ PER ROTATION: 25 MOA
TOTAL ELEVATION ADJ:: 70 MOA
TOTAL WINDAGE ADJ: 70 MOA
MIN PARALLAX: 10Y
PURGING GAS: Argon
WEIGHT: 32.3 oz

Follow moondog:

Creative Director, Content Creator, and Game Producer

Tom "Moondog" DelMundo is an award-winning copywriter and art director with over a decade of Madison Avenue experience.

Latest posts from