Meopta MeoPro R6 2.5-15x44 SFP – Easy-to-handle all-round scope for stalking, high seat hunting, and light hunting weapons
If you want to shoot accurately, your scope must match the situation.
The Meopta MeoPro R6 2.5-15x44 SFP is not just any riflescope; it's a purposefully designed solution for stalking, woodland, high seat hunting, and all-round hunting rifles. What matters is not just the magnification – but how the image, reticle, parallax, and point of impact work together in real-world use.
With 2.5–15x, a 44mm objective lens, and a second focal plane (SFP), this scope is designed for a wide range of hunting applications in an easy-to-handle design – with understandable mechanics, clear reticle logic, and precise point of impact control.
Why this particular product?
✔ 2.5–15x magnification range – useful for a wide range of hunting applications in an easy-to-handle design
✔ 44mm objective lens – compact and easy to handle, with more light reserve than 24mm scopes
✔ 2nd focal plane (SFP) – SFP with 4C/Z-Plex remains fast and unobtrusive for hunting
✔ Click logic: The R6 click logic is fine enough for precise sighting-in; expect approximately 0.7 cm per click at 100 m
✔ Typical Meopta robust, nitrogen-filled, and weatherproof construction
✔ 13.3 m field of view at 100 m at low magnification
✔ 44mm objective lens for weight advantage
Why MeoPro R6 2.5-15x44 SFP?
This model makes sense if you don't just want the largest possible scope, but a riflescope that cleanly covers your real shooting range.
- You get a clear classification of distances instead of mere data sheet values
- You can deliberately choose your reticle to suit the application
- When sighting-in, you immediately understand what a click practically does
- You get optics that combine hunting practice and controlled training
- You avoid bad purchases because magnification, objective lens size, and focal plane match the application
The difference to an incorrectly chosen riflescope:
❌ Too much magnification: narrow field of view, slow aiming, unnecessary weight
❌ Too small objective lens: less reserve at dusk and high magnification
✔ MeoPro R6 2.5-15x44 SFP: a wide range of hunting applications in an easy-to-handle design with suitable optical and mechanical reserve
Exactly this difference is not apparent in the store – but when sighting-in, at dusk, and under time pressure.
Practical Tip: Cleanly document zero, clicks, and point of impact
The R6 click logic is fine enough for precise sighting-in; expect approximately 0.7 cm per click at 100 m. After sighting-in, always note: ammunition, sighting-in distance, approximate temperature, click position, and magnification used.
This way, you can immediately tell later whether a deviation is due to the ammunition, mounting, parallax, shooting stance, or truly the scope.
Key Features
- Magnification range: 2.5–15x
- Objective lens diameter: 44 mm
- Main tube: 30 mm
- Reticle: 4C or Z-Plex
- Reticle plane: 2nd focal plane (SFP)
- Click adjustment: 0.7 cm / 100 m
- Parallax: Parallax adjustment available
- Robust, weatherproof construction for hunting and training
- Can be used effectively with proper mounting and controlled sighting-in
- 13.3 m field of view at 100 m at low magnification
- 44mm objective lens for weight advantage
- 30mm tube for solid mounting base
Our Assessment
The MeoPro R6 2.5-15x44 SFP demonstrates its strength where a wide range of hunting applications in an easy-to-handle design is required. It is not a random scope for everything, but must be deliberately matched to the weapon, mounting, ammunition, and hunting ground.
The combination of 2.5–15x and 44mm is crucial in practice: the lower magnification is about overview and speed, the higher magnification about target assessment, control, and precise work.
SFP with 4C/Z-Plex remains fast and unobtrusive for hunting. This reticle logic is precisely what determines whether you merely aim – or can truly make clean use of holdovers, corrections, and distances.
Suitable for
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Hunters: if your hunting ground requires stalking, woodland, high seat hunting, and all-round hunting rifles
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Sport shooters: if you want to use point of impact, clicks, and reticle reproducibly
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High seat / Field / Shooting Range: if you need more control than with a pure all-round scope
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Users planning for attachments or accessories: if mounting height, overall length, and parallax need to be considered
Why exactly for you?
If you want to know why your shot hits or misses, you need a scope that works predictably. This model gives you exactly that technical basis – provided the mounting, zero, and shooting technique are correct.
You can also find suitable optics, mounts, and accessories in our Outdoor & Crisis Preparedness category.
Important note:
Riflescopes improve target acquisition and precision but do not replace safe weapon handling, clean shooting technique, or legal review of the intended use.
Always check mounting, point of impact, and ammunition used before hunting.
Magnification & Objective Lens – what does it practically mean?
2.5–15x doesn't automatically mean "better," but describes your usable working range. The low magnification determines the field of view and speed, the high magnification determines target control and precision.
The 44mm objective lens is primarily relevant for light reserve and image stability. The higher you magnify, the smaller the exit pupil becomes – which is why a suitable objective lens size is particularly important at dusk and high magnification.
- Low magnification: faster acquisition, more peripheral vision
- High magnification: control bullet impact, assess target more cleanly
- 44 mm: more reserve in low light and at higher magnification
- Always check at the shooting range at which magnification you truly shoot stably
Reticle & Focal Plane – correct usage
This model operates with a 2nd focal plane (SFP). SFP with 4C/Z-Plex remains fast and unobtrusive for hunting.
Important: A reticle is only an advantage if you know at which magnification or in which plane your hold marks are accurate.
- Deliberately choose 4C or Z-Plex according to the application
- 4C/Z-Plex: fast, clean, intuitively hunting-oriented
- BDC/MRAD/MilDot: useful if you actively use distances, holdovers, and ballistics
- Do not set illuminated reticle too brightly – otherwise, the aiming point will overexpose at dusk
Clicks, Zero & Point of Impact
The R6 click logic is fine enough for precise sighting-in; expect approximately 0.7 cm per click at 100 m. This is extremely important when sighting-in because you don't have to guess, but can calculate the correction cleanly.
After every mounting change, ring change, or ammunition change, a control group should be shot at the range. Especially with hunting optics, trust in the point of impact is more important than any advertising claim.
- Cleanly set zero at a defined distance
- Document click position after sighting-in
- Shoot a control group after mounting work
- Deliberately adjust parallax at high magnification
- Never use a single shot as a reference
Features & Construction / Contents
- A riflescope of this class relies on clean mounting, correct torque, and stress-free ring position
- Nitrogen filling and weatherproof construction support use in rain, cold, and temperature changes
- Coated lenses reduce disturbing influences from water, dirt, and reflections
- The technical performance only becomes visible when ammunition, mounting, and shooter work reproducibly
Technical Data
- Magnification: 2.5–15x
- Objective lens diameter: 44 mm
- Main tube diameter: 30 mm
- Length: 355 mm
- Weight: approx. 772 g to 822 g (depending on version)
- Field of view at 100 m: 13.3 – 2.3 m
- Elevation adjustment range: 204 cm / 100 m
- Eye relief: 100 mm
- Objective thread: M48.5x0.75
Scope of Delivery
- MeoPro R6 Series riflescope
- Throw lever
- Protective caps
- User manual
FAQ
For what distance is this scope suitable?
That depends on the hunting ground, weapon, and ammunition. The 2.5–15x magnification range makes it particularly suitable for a wide range of hunting applications in an easy-to-handle design; however, a clean zero and realistically trained distances remain crucial.
What does click adjustment mean in practice?
The R6 click logic is fine enough for precise sighting-in; expect approximately 0.7 cm per click at 100 m. This allows you to specifically correct point of impact deviations during sighting-in, instead of adjusting by feel.
Is high magnification always better?
No. High magnification shows more details but makes shooting stance errors, mirage, and parallax errors more visible. In practice, the highest magnification is not automatically the best shooting magnification.
When do I need parallax adjustment?
As soon as you work with higher magnification or at varying distances. Incorrectly set parallax can cause point of impact errors, even though the reticle and target appear clean.
What should I check after mounting?
Ring mounting, eye relief, horizontal alignment, torque values, parallax, zero, and a control group with the ammunition actually used.
Especially in the area of all-round riflescopes, high seat optics, and precise point of impact, not a single data value decides, but the interplay of magnification, objective lens, reticle, zero, and reproducible mounting.