Athlon Ares 65mm Full Review

Joined
May 10, 2017
Messages
2,160
I recently picked up an Athlon Ares 15-45x65mm angled spotting scope to put through the paces and see if I wanted to buy it. I planned to return the spotting scope and keep my current Vortex Viper 65mm spotting scope if I didn't like the Athlon better. The long and the short of it is that I'd choose the Athlon Ares by a wide margin. The Vortex Viper is a fine-to-good mid-range spotting scope to my eyes. The Athlon Ares is everything I want though: light, compact, great glass. My review took place in the Idaho hills near my house in bright sunlight and, most of all, low light conditions.

Size:
I’m a backpack hunter so size and weight is important to me. I’m not a guy who leaves the spotter in the truck but that doesn’t mean I’m not feeling the weight on mile 12 either. The Athlon Ares dimensions are 3.5"x9.5". I immediately thought this doesn't look like the size of a 65mm spotter--it looks like a 50mm spotter. The dimensions for popular 50mm scopes are 9-11 inches long. So, yes, the Athlon Ares spotting scope is the length of a compact spotting scope, an amazing feature for packability.

Dimensions for competitors of 65mm size I found were closer to 15 inches. I kept comparing the Athlon Ares and Vortex Viper and as you'll see in the picture it's pretty mind-blowing how much smaller the Athlon Ares is.

Weight:
The weight for the 65mm Athlon Ares is 43 ounces. That puts it near the top the class for 65mm spotting scopes and is approaching compact spotters. 30 ounces is celebrated by the 50mm spotting scope companies as being really light. That means there's less than a pound of weight difference between the Athlon Ares 65mm and the compact spotters. Even for an ounce-counting ultralight backpack hunter that is not much of a weight penalty for the benefits of a larger lens.

Pick up the Vortex Viper and there is an immediately noticeable difference in weight difference. Many 65mm spotting scopes are in the 60-65 ounce range. After reviewing the weight and size, my feeling was that the Vortex Viper would have to be a noticeable notch above the Ares in optical quality to justify its place in my hunting backpack.

Build quality:
Unlike some companies, I don’t have any expectation to use the warranty based on the build quality of the spotting scope. Without getting into the technical and scientific features of the build, which I’ll leave for another day, Athlon is built with sturdy aluminum frame with a hard plastic exterior. It doesn't feel cheap which is what I'm normally looking at. The Athlon eye piece particularly interesting in how large and robust it is.

The Vortex Viper, by contrast, has an eye piece that's smaller and likely less able to withstand impact. The Vortex Viper also had some play in the eye piece which didn't affect performance but was concerning. There are no such issues with the Athlon Ares. The Vortex Viper has served me without issue for years so proof has been in the pudding. I would expect it to be very likely that the Athlon Ares would be the same or better.

Optical quality:
Welcome to the main event: the optics challenge. The Athlon Ares met all my expectations in this area; in edge-to-edge clarity, I found the Ares to be very good. It had the pop through the lens that quality optics deliver and reminded me of some of the better glass I've looked through. It quickly crossed my mind that I can see why it gets some comparisons to the Vortex Razor spotting scope and others which are hundreds of dollars more expensive. The middle of the scope is very sharp and just at the very outer edges can you notice a hint of loss of clarity.

In comparing the Vortex Viper side-by-side with the Ares, I found them to be close in clarity and sharpness. Ultimately, the more I looked through the Ares the more I felt it had a more comfortable and natural view. I do feel the clarity is a slight notch above. When comparing the huge size difference between the spotting scopes, it was amazing to me that the view in the Athlon doesn't lose anything to scopes that are so much larger. Looking at the two side-by-side I subconsciously expected the larger scope to have a more powerful view.

With entry level scopes, a frequent issue is that the higher magnifications are not very useable because as you go to the upper magnification range the view becomes too dark and blurry. The Athlon Ares does not have this issue. Zoom on up to 45x magnification and you barely notice a smidge of clarity loss and the scope is naturally a little darker. I happily scoped out the country side from max magnification and wasn't feeling like I was looking through anything blurry or dark. Zooming back and forth between the lowest and highest magnifications you sometimes forget completely you're at 45x because the difference is so minimal. I found the Vortex Viper to be relatively similar in this aspect but not quite the same level again.

While there is of course a scope out there with better optics that costs more than two thousand dollars, the ability to better spot animals due to clarity is minimal at best. In my testing I found an eagle at approximately two miles away. The view was clear as day and I easily identified it as a bald eagle. Yes, that bull three miles away is definitely a shooter six point with either scope. The Athlon is very clear glass that will help you spot and judge animals.

Color fidelity:
I don’t consider myself an expert in determining color distortions in glass. In looking as closely as possible, I feel the color tone is very neutral and I did not notice any real color distortion while viewing objects with vibrant colors side-by-size between the spotting scope and the naked eye, including the sky, signs, structures, and construction signs.

Field of view:
The Athlon Ares has a field of view of 171 to 81 feet depending on the magnification. This beats the Vortex Razer by a wide margin. In the field I could notice a bit of extra field of view between the Athlon Ares and Vortex Viper side-by-side. I believe there is better field of view on scopes well out of the Athlon Ares’ price range but the Athlon Ares is pretty strong in this category.

Light gathering:
Crucial for glassing during those early and late animal movement areas, I found the light gathering to be quite strong for the Athlon Ares. The Vortex Viper performed similarly. I was able to glass without noticing significant loss of clarity of light gathering through right around 30 minutes before sunrise and 30 minutes after sunset. As I kept glassing I would start to get the effects of darkness but would be able to pick out much of the detail on distant hillsides as it became dark enough that I could see little with the naked eye around me and all cars had their headlights on. I really can’t imagine that a top end spotter would provide much additional benefit here.

Functionality:
I found the Athlon Ares to be well designed and more functional than the Vortex Viper. One item that stuck out was that the focus nob was easier to reach and easier to use. The magnification numbers were more easily visible. The caps on the lens went on and off quicker and stayed better. I was pretty impressed by how the Ares was designed as everything felt intentional.

Warranty:
Athlon has a no-fault lifetime warranty on their optics. It's nice peace of mind to have when traversing snow-covered steep slopes.

I am quite impressed after putting the Athlon Ares through field tests and close inspection. The view is clear. The scope is off the charts on packability and weight for a 65mm spotting scope. The Athlon Ares is a great choice for a mid-range spotting scope and it strikes well above its price category. Please feel free to ask me any questions.
 
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bigbuckdj

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Jul 29, 2019
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503
Thanks for this review. Have you had any experience with a meopta meopro or the athlon Cronus?


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Joined
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If the ares is the same as the Cabela's krotos then it is a fantastic scope.

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OP
I
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Messages
2,160
Thanks for this review. Have you had any experience with a meopta meopro or the athlon Cronus?


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No, sorry. Those spotters are whole different price category and I’m a mid-range man (tm). 😀
 

Ratbeetle

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Joined
Jul 20, 2018
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Just hold your phone up to it


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You laugh, but that is what I'm having to do now! :LOL:

Here are some rams I glassed up a few weeks ago with my Ares. This was from a bit over a mile away. Keep in mind I'm just holding my phone, so the image is probably not as clear (too shaky) as it would be with an adapter. Overall, I've been very impressed with the little Athlon.

112918
 
OP
I
Joined
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Messages
2,160
You laugh, but that is what I'm having to do now! :LOL:

Here are some rams I glassed up a few weeks ago with my Ares. This was from a bit over a mile away. Keep in mind I'm just holding my phone, so the image is probably not as clear (too shaky) as it would be with an adapter. Overall, I've been very impressed with the little Athlon.

View attachment 112918

Thanks for posting. Great picture. I was hesitant to post because it really isn’t as clear as the real thing—looking through the scope with your own eyes. As long as you understand the caveat, the photo is useful.
 
Joined
Sep 6, 2016
Messages
741
Location
Northern Colorado
Soooo.. I bought one and I have to say I’m really satisfied with it. I wouldn’t consider it lightweight but it’s definitely compact. The only glass I had it to compare to was some Nikon Monarch 10x42s and at 15x with the Athlon the clarity from edge to edge and color was virtually identical. Considering the Monarch 48x60 spotter is also about 1k more, no way could I justify the price on that.

Thanks again for the review! I’m going to take it out again this evening, I’ll get some pics and share.


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Joined
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5,698
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Lenexa, KS
Thanks for this review. Have you had any experience with a meopta meopro or the athlon Cronus?


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Does Meopta make a Meopro in the 65mm range?

I have the 80 and can attest it's incredible. I also have the Kowa 553 and at equal zoom ranges their are similarly clear, and that Kowa has fluorite glass.
 

IdahoHntr

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Joined
May 3, 2018
Messages
392
Location
Idaho Falls
This a really good review on an even better scope.

I also picked up the Athlon a while back and like it a lot. There are 2 things that you didn't mention that I have noticed though.

1. Because of the wide eye piece of the Athlon, it creates a little bit of a different feel when glassing with it compared to other scopes. Not necessarily a negative and I've actually come to like it a bit, but it is something to be noted. It definitely felt weird getting behind this scope at first compared to other scopes I have used.

2. The only negative I've come across is the eye relief on this scope. It does not have very good eye relief and I imagine eye glass wearers would really struggle. Especially on the highest magnifications I really have to work to get close enough to the eye piece without actually touching it. It has become easier to deal with the longer I have had the scope, but I still wish it was a little better in this department. I was also comparing this scope to the Vortex Viper and that is the ONLY area the Viper was better than the Athlon.

In my comparison of the 2 scopes I also would choose the Athlon. I actually don't even think I'd make it as close as you make it sound, as I felt the Athlon was by far the better optic in every category (especially in overall clarity). I will be directly comparing the Athlon to the gen 1 vortex razor over the next couple months as well, so maybe I can come back and update how it stacks up against that glass.
 
OP
I
Joined
May 10, 2017
Messages
2,160
This a really good review on an even better scope.

I also picked up the Athlon a while back and like it a lot. There are 2 things that you didn't mention that I have noticed though.

1. Because of the wide eye piece of the Athlon, it creates a little bit of a different feel when glassing with it compared to other scopes. Not necessarily a negative and I've actually come to like it a bit, but it is something to be noted. It definitely felt weird getting behind this scope at first compared to other scopes I have used.

2. The only negative I've come across is the eye relief on this scope. It does not have very good eye relief and I imagine eye glass wearers would really struggle. Especially on the highest magnifications I really have to work to get close enough to the eye piece without actually touching it. It has become easier to deal with the longer I have had the scope, but I still wish it was a little better in this department. I was also comparing this scope to the Vortex Viper and that is the ONLY area the Viper was better than the Athlon.

In my comparison of the 2 scopes I also would choose the Athlon. I actually don't even think I'd make it as close as you make it sound, as I felt the Athlon was by far the better optic in every category (especially in overall clarity). I will be directly comparing the Athlon to the gen 1 vortex razor over the next couple months as well, so maybe I can come back and update how it stacks up against that glass.

Thanks so much for your thoughts. Sign me up for the Razor comp—report back.
 
Joined
Sep 6, 2016
Messages
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Location
Northern Colorado
Few pics from just now. Spotted a forky at about 1000yrds in my neighborhood. Hard to tell in the photos, really doesn’t do it justice since I had to hand hold my phone but could count his tines. Sun was down over the mtns at this point in the evening. First pic 15x, second 45x, both without zoom on phone.

f3172f572f89a0296bfcd9173f069747.jpg
66359009e5fef3eec71655e49ac4cab9.jpg
76d6841d0222a8673653c4139528aa03.jpg
14165993331491410c20c7a792072eaa.jpg
b4d3b7d7e8ec50deb0ec713c5591b3af.jpg



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sman

FNG
Joined
Aug 3, 2019
Messages
4
Thanks Topo. I'm really interested in the Athlon spotters. Quality looks nice. How about low light conditions?
 
OP
I
Joined
May 10, 2017
Messages
2,160
Thanks Topo. I'm really interested in the Athlon spotters. Quality looks nice. How about low light conditions?

More than necessary IMO. I didn’t experience loss of clarity or light in any significant way at the end of legal shooting light in the evenings. You could keep glassing well past it. Rocking low light performance.
 

sman

FNG
Joined
Aug 3, 2019
Messages
4
I'm impressed, this one checks all the boxes and a bonus is the compact size. (y)
I recently picked up an Athlon Ares 15-45x65mm angled spotting scope to put through the paces and see if I wanted to buy it. I planned to return the spotting scope and keep my current Vortex Viper 65mm spotting scope if I didn't like the Athlon better. The long and the short of it is that I'd choose the Athlon Ares by a wide margin. The Vortex Viper is a fine-to-good mid-range spotting scope to my eyes. The Athlon Ares is everything I want though: light, compact, great glass. My review took place in the Idaho hills near my house in bright sunlight and, most of all, low light conditions.

Size:
I’m a backpack hunter so size and weight is important to me. I’m not a guy who leaves the spotter in the truck but that doesn’t mean I’m not feeling the weight on mile 12 either. The Athlon Ares dimensions are 3.5"x9.5". I immediately thought this doesn't look like the size of a 65mm spotter--it looks like a 50mm spotter. The dimensions for popular 50mm scopes are 9-11 inches long. So, yes, the Athlon Ares spotting scope is the length of a compact spotting scope, an amazing feature for packability.

Dimensions for competitors of 65mm size I found were closer to 15 inches. I kept comparing the Athlon Ares and Vortex Viper and as you'll see in the picture it's pretty mind-blowing how much smaller the Athlon Ares is.

Weight:
The weight for the 65mm Athlon Ares is 43 ounces. That puts it near the top the class for 65mm spotting scopes and is approaching compact spotters. 30 ounces is celebrated by the 50mm spotting scope companies as being really light. That means there's less than a pound of weight difference between the Athlon Ares 65mm and the compact spotters. Even for an ounce-counting ultralight backpack hunter that is not much of a weight penalty for the benefits of a larger lens.

Pick up the Vortex Viper and there is an immediately noticeable difference in weight difference. Many 65mm spotting scopes are in the 60-65 ounce range. After reviewing the weight and size, my feeling was that the Vortex Viper would have to be a noticeable notch above the Ares in optical quality to justify its place in my hunting backpack.

Build quality:
Unlike some companies, I don’t have any expectation to use the warranty based on the build quality of the spotting scope. Without getting into the technical and scientific features of the build, which I’ll leave for another day, Athlon is built with sturdy aluminum frame with a hard plastic exterior. It doesn't feel cheap which is what I'm normally looking at. The Athlon eye piece particularly interesting in how large and robust it is.

The Vortex Viper, by contrast, has an eye piece that's smaller and likely less able to withstand impact. The Vortex Viper also had some play in the eye piece which didn't affect performance but was concerning. There are no such issues with the Athlon Ares. The Vortex Viper has served me without issue for years so proof has been in the pudding. I would expect it to be very likely that the Athlon Ares would be the same or better.

Optical quality:
Welcome to the main event: the optics challenge. The Athlon Ares met all my expectations in this area; in edge-to-edge clarity, I found the Ares to be very good. It had the pop through the lens that quality optics deliver and reminded me of some of the better glass I've looked through. It quickly crossed my mind that I can see why it gets some comparisons to the Vortex Razor spotting scope and others which are hundreds of dollars more expensive. The middle of the scope is very sharp and just at the very outer edges can you notice a hint of loss of clarity.

In comparing the Vortex Viper side-by-side with the Ares, I found them to be close in clarity and sharpness. Ultimately, the more I looked through the Ares the more I felt it had a more comfortable and natural view. I do feel the clarity is a slight notch above. When comparing the huge size difference between the spotting scopes, it was amazing to me that the view in the Athlon doesn't lose anything to scopes that are so much larger. Looking at the two side-by-side I subconsciously expected the larger scope to have a more powerful view.

With entry level scopes, a frequent issue is that the higher magnifications are not very useable because as you go to the upper magnification range the view becomes too dark and blurry. The Athlon Ares does not have this issue. Zoom on up to 45x magnification and you barely notice a smidge of clarity loss and the scope is naturally a little darker. I happily scoped out the country side from max magnification and wasn't feeling like I was looking through anything blurry or dark. Zooming back and forth between the lowest and highest magnifications you sometimes forget completely you're at 45x because the difference is so minimal. I found the Vortex Viper to be relatively similar in this aspect but not quite the same level again.

While there is of course a scope out there with better optics that costs more than two thousand dollars, the ability to better spot animals due to clarity is minimal at best. In my testing I found an eagle at approximately two miles away. The view was clear as day and I easily identified it as a bald eagle. Yes, that bull three miles away is definitely a shooter six point with either scope. The Athlon is very clear glass that will help you spot and judge animals.

Color fidelity:
I don’t consider myself an expert in determining color distortions in glass. In looking as closely as possible, I feel the color tone is very neutral and I did not notice any real color distortion while viewing objects with vibrant colors side-by-size between the spotting scope and the naked eye, including the sky, signs, structures, and construction signs.

Field of view:
The Athlon Ares has a field of view of 171 to 81 feet depending on the magnification. This beats the Vortex Razer by a wide margin. In the field I could notice a bit of extra field of view between the Athlon Ares and Vortex Viper side-by-side. I believe there is better field of view on scopes well out of the Athlon Ares’ price range but the Athlon Ares is pretty strong in this category.

Light gathering:
Crucial for glassing during those early and late animal movement areas, I found the light gathering to be quite strong for the Athlon Ares. The Vortex Viper performed similarly. I was able to glass without noticing significant loss of clarity of light gathering through right around 30 minutes before sunrise and 30 minutes after sunset. As I kept glassing I would start to get the effects of darkness but would be able to pick out much of the detail on distant hillsides as it became dark enough that I could see little with the naked eye around me and all cars had their headlights on. I really can’t imagine that a top end spotter would provide much additional benefit here.

Functionality:
I found the Athlon Ares to be well designed and more functional than the Vortex Viper. One item that stuck out was that the focus nob was easier to reach and easier to use. The magnification numbers were more easily visible. The caps on the lens went on and off quicker and stayed better. I was pretty impressed by how the Ares was designed as everything felt intentional.

Warranty:
Athlon has a no-fault lifetime warranty on their optics. It's nice peace of mind to have when traversing snow-covered steep slopes.

I am quite impressed after putting the Athlon Ares through field tests and close inspection. The view is clear. The scope is off the charts on packability and weight for a 65mm spotting scope. The Athlon Ares is a great choice for a mid-range spotting scope and it strikes well above its price category. Please feel free to ask me any questions.
More than necessary IMO. I didn’t experience loss of clarity or light in any significant way at the end of legal shooting light in the evenings. You could keep glassing well past it. Rocking low light performance.
 
Joined
Sep 6, 2016
Messages
741
Location
Northern Colorado
Thanks Topo. I'm really interested in the Athlon spotters. Quality looks nice. How about low light conditions?

Is was really good I thought. That buck started moving after that and was able to follow him pretty well until dark. I think it’s really a great spotter for the price.


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