Tag Archives: Konus

Konuspro EL-30

“Groundbreaking” and “Revolutionary” are words that usually indicate marketing hype when used to describe a scope. But in the case of the Konuspro EL-30 6-24×50, these superlatives are arguably justified. For the EL-30 is one of the first commercially available high-power scopes with an LCD reticle, which can be changed at the press of a button.

I first got a chance to see the 4-16×44 EL-30 at the Konus booth in Shot Show earlier this year. Konus sent me their new 6-24×50 model which I beg testing. The first sample sent had a sticky elevation turret. This did not really effect he function of the scope but when I contacted them about it, they didn’t hesitate to send a replacement.

The scope has some unusual features. It’s longer than other 6-24×50 scopes due to the larger than usual reticle housing box forward of the turrets. This enlarged housing also contains the battery compartment for a CR2 cell and the electronics for the LCD reticle.

There is a large flat slab face on the left side of the turret box where there would usually be a paralax/illuminator knob. I speculate that the reticle electronics required the repositioning of those controls. The scope sports a parallax focus ring in front of the magnification power ring next to the eyepiece. Likewise, the illuminator and reticle controls are housed on the top of the eyepiece.

The scope offers 10 different styles of reticle which can be changed with a small MODE button. The reticles range from traditional hunting duplex crosshairs, to complex Christmas Tree holdovers, and simple holo-sight style rings. Unfortunately the LCD doesn’t reflect much of the red illumination light even at its brightest setting.

The turrets are pop to lock with loud audible clicks; though rather soft tactile feedback. The turrets have a fine 1/8 MOA per click adjustment with a 56 MOA of adjustment range. NRL and ELR shooters will find the scope frustrating. The turrets are normal sized for a hunting scope but too small for competition; I found my thumb constantly banging up into the enlarged reticle box when manipulating the elevation turret.

In testing I found the scope to have a very small and unforgiving Eye Box (exit pupil). Unusually, the edge of EL-30’s Eye Box turns grayish-white instead of darkening into black like most scopes. I wonder if the unusually small eye box and light color edge is a side-effect of the LCD reticle?

I could make out USAF resolution lines down to Element 2 in Group -1 but overall sharpness is middling with soft outer edges, a brownish tint, and lacking in clear enough detail to clearly make out .22 cal holes on paper at 100 yrds. The street price of this scope is around $750 (probably owing to the extra engineering and electronics in the LCD reticle). But the overall image quality was more in line with sub $500 glass.

For some $750 is still a fair price to get the versatility of a changeable reticle (and bragging rights of owning new tech). You can go from a fine long range target reticle to a traditional hunting duplex or back again in heartbeat. Instead of buying, mounting, and zeroing out two different scopes on the same rifle, you can switch the reticle at the press of a button.

The scopes overall design seems better suited for the hunter who occasionally dabbles in target shooting rather than the other way around. Konus would have to radically change the external design of this scope to appeal to tactical or competition shooters. But I applaud the attempt. The EL-30 has its flaws but it is a decent 1st Generation scope using new LCD technology. This could become the norm; like LCD faces became the norm in watches and clocks.

ONLINE RETAIL SOURCES

Optics Planet #commission
https://shrsl.com/47ezw

Amazon #commission (only the 4-16×44 is currently available)
https://amzn.to/46Ri2KJ

RESOLUTION

GROUP: -1
ELEMENT: 2

MANUFACTURER SPECS

MAGNIFICATION: 6-24x
TUBE: 30mm
RETICLE: Illuminated LCD x10 patterns
TURRETS: 1/8 MOA/click
ADJ. RANGE: 56 MOA
LENSES: Fully multi-coated
FOV: @100m/yrds 1.1° at 6X – 3.2° at 24X
WEIGHT: 780gr / 27.5 OZ
LENGTH: 399mm / 15.7”
EYE RELIEF: 83,8mm at 6X; 76.2mm at 24x
EXIT PUPIL: 0.9mm at 6X; 0.82mm at 24X

Konus Absolute 5-40×56 ED

Konus is an Italian optics company based in Verona. I had an opportunity to visit their booth at SHOT Show earlier this year and examine their wide range of hunting and target scopes. Konus sent me their Absolute scope to test and I was surprised at its wide range of magnification going from 5x-40x. Prior to this the highest power scope I I have tested was the Leupold Mark 5 with a 7x-35x; the Konus exceeds the Leupold in both the low and high magnification, and at half the price.

The Absolute has a traditional profile, with a 30mm tube and tactical style exposed turrets. The scope tested has a half-MIL crosshair reticle that is illuminated in both red and blue light with brightness ranging from 1-5. It is powered by a CR2032 coin battery co-housed in the side parallax focus knob. The scope can focus as close as 10 yrds, which is much appreciated feature for airgun shooters and NRL22 competitors.

The elevation and windage turrets are traditionally sized turrets unlike the over-sized monster knobs that have become popular recently among ELR competitors. The Kronus turrets are push-to-lock and are zero resettable by loosening three set-screws around each turret. The scope tested was the MILRAD version and they offer an MOA as well.

The turrets turn 1/10 MILs per click and are nicely loud and audible. They provide good tactile feedback per click but aren’t the most positive turrets I’ve felt. Oddly the elevation turret provides 7.2 MILs per rotation rather than whole number? I suspect that Konus originally designed this scope for MOA and swapped out a MIL conversion turret, which is why the turret has 7.2 rather than 7.0 MILs per rotation.

I found the turrets to be accurate and repeatable. Overall sharpness was good from center to edge. At 40x the scope able to resolve twice as much detail as a typical 24x scope but with a much less forgiving eyebox (as to be expected by the reduced exit pupal at 40x). The image at 40x was clear enough to make out wrinkles on the target paper at 100 yrds.

The Konus Absolute is a 40x scope with the extra magnification not found in many scope brands. I don’t think this scope will appeal to ELR shooters who prefer first focal plane scopes with Christmas-tree reticles. But for long distance airgun competition, precision target shooters, long-range hunters, or older shooters with weaker eyes, this is a scope to consider.

Konus Absolute is available through this Affiliate Link
Optics Planet: https://alnk.to/2Qu5Igb