Well!
In my experience, the Zeiss strikes a very good balance in several aspects I personally value in a rifle optic.
- The zoom range might not make it optimal for up close running game or long-range benchrest, but it sure covers a wide range of situations. Like I said, with a Blaser, it's not really that big of a problem to have dedicated barrels with dedicated optics to cover each specific hunting purpose, now the V8 I consider more of a "I don't know what I'll be hunting next but luckily I don't really have to care much either". It's a generic solution and a pretty damn good one at that.
- Optical quality is top notch, something which is emphasized in night hunting we do here in Finland.
- Lit reticle is a must.
- Zeiss typically has repeatable elevation & windage adjustments and strength to withstand some unintentional physical abuse without losing zero.
- 10 mrad per turn for elevation is really just the minimum I am willing to settle for since I also happen to practice long range target shooting.
- Weight and dimensions are completely reasonable given the other capabilities. Not lightweight but far from S&B 5-25, I have owned two, they're nice when you're laying down behind the rifle, other than that, they're a pain.
As for the ASV. I am not really worried about that one. Having built one pretty accurate piece of external ballistics software I know any BDC turret only applies for one particular bullet and load in one set of atmospheric conditions. Now that doesn't make them useless, not by far. I quite like the BDC approach but you do need to acknowledge their shortcomings and compensate accordingly.
I used to have a 3-12x56 Zeiss with ASV, I modified it into "double turn" as 7mrad/turn was just not enough, and I customized the turret to make room for a BDC label supplemented with a ballistics card which contained +/- adjustments for my load for different atmospheric conditions. Now having said that, the Zeiss ASV+ rings work just fine for typical hunting distances.
