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Scopes, Sights & Optics

Shop our selection of scopes, sights & optics from top brands like Night Fision, HUXWRX Safety Company, FAB Defense, C&H Precision, and Athlon Optics. Rocking P Firearms offers high-quality, precision scopes, sights & optics built for hunters, long-range shooters, competition shooters, and tactical users who need clear glass and reliable aiming solutions in any condition. From magnified rifle scopes to compact reflex sights and rugged red dots, we carry a wide range of optics to fit every firearm and shooting style. Explore our gun scopes and red dot sights, then fine-tune your setup with gun parts to dial it in. Round out your kit with rifles, handguns, and shotguns from our full lineup.

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Scopes, Sights & Optics Buying Guide

Buy scopes, sights and optics online by comparing models, checking current availability, and reviewing specifications such as caliber, capacity, barrel length, and sight configuration. Selecting the right optical equipment depends on your platform, target distance, and the lighting conditions you expect to encounter.

Use these pointers to focus your search:

  • Pick magnification that matches your shooting distance with quality gun scopes, favoring 1-6x or 1-8x LPVOs for short-to-mid range work, 3-9x or 4-12x for general hunting, and 5-25x or higher for precision shooting beyond 600 yards.
  • Choose a parallax-free red dot sight for fast target acquisition on handguns, shotguns, and short-range carbines, since both-eyes-open shooting and unlimited eye relief speed up sight picture across positions.
  • Pair the right optic to your rifles based on intended use, since hunters often benefit from BDC reticles and capped turrets while precision shooters favor exposed turrets, FFP reticles, and mil-based holdover marks.
  • Equip your shotguns with simple red dots or ghost ring iron sights for slug, buckshot, and turkey work, since fast sight acquisition matters more than magnification on most shotgun applications.
  • Stock related gun parts like rings, mounts, base plates, and scope levels, since proper installation hardware preserves zero and protects the optic during transport, range sessions, and field use.
  • Consider redundancy by adding back-up iron sights, fiber optic fronts, or tritium night sights, since reliable secondary aiming solutions matter when batteries fail or the primary optic gets damaged.

Local And Compliance Notes

Browse scopes, sights and optics online or visit the gun shop in Idalou, Texas to handle different reticles, check eye relief, and compare glass clarity in person. Rocking P Firearms serves customers in the nearby cities of Lubbock, Lorenzo, and Ralls, stocking optics for whitetail and mule deer hunting, varmint and predator work, three-gun competition, defensive carry, and precision rifle shooting across West Texas.

Most optics ship without federal firearms restrictions and do not require a background check or ATF Form 4473, though night vision and thermal devices may be subject to International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) and other export control rules that prohibit shipment outside the United States. Texas does not impose state-level optic restrictions for civilian sporting use.

Mount optics using torque-rated rings or mounts and verify zero before relying on a setup for hunting or defense, since loose mounting hardware is the most common source of accuracy and reliability issues. Store optics in padded cases or with lens caps installed to protect coatings, and contact the shop with questions about availability, fitment, or special-order configurations.

Frequently Asked Questions About Scopes, Sights & Optics

1. What is the difference between MOA and MIL reticles?

MOA (minute of angle) divides the circle into 21,600 units and translates to roughly one inch at 100 yards, while MIL (milliradian) divides the circle into 6,283 units and translates to 3.6 inches at 100 yards. Both systems are accurate, with shooters typically choosing based on personal preference and matching turret-to-reticle units.

2. What magnification do I need for hunting?

3. What is parallax and why does it matter?

4. Are red dot sights waterproof?

5. What is the difference between first focal plane and second focal plane scopes?

6. Are night vision optics legal for hunting in Texas?

7. How do I clean optic lenses without scratching them?

8. Do I need a background check to buy a scope or red dot sight?