Vortex Crossfire II 6-18×44 AO Rifle Scope
The top of the Crossfire II lineup is a different kind of scope than the hunting models below it. At 6-18x with an adjustable objective for parallax control, this is the one you put on a dedicated varmint rifle, a precision trainer, or any setup where hitting small things at real distances is the actual goal – and where you don’t want to spend $500 to learn how.
What Separates This From the Rest of the Crossfire II Family
The Crossfire II lineup reviewed elsewhere on this site starts with the 2-7×32 for compact field hunting and steps up through the 3-9×40 and 4-12×44 for general deer and open-country use. Those are all honest hunting scopes with fixed parallax and capped turrets – set your zero, leave it alone, use BDC holds in the field.
The 6-18×44 AO breaks that pattern. The “AO” stands for adjustable objective – a parallax adjustment ring on the objective bell that lets you eliminate parallax error at any shooting distance. That feature, combined with 18x maximum magnification, puts this scope in a genuinely different category: budget precision work, varmint shooting, and building the fundamentals of longer-range shooting on a platform that doesn’t require a serious financial commitment.
At 18x you can see bullet holes at 200 yards without walking to the target. You can see your impacts on steel at 400-500 yards clearly enough to call corrections and adjust. You can watch a prairie dog react to the shot at 300 yards. That feedback loop – being able to see what happened and adjust immediately – is how people actually improve their long-range shooting, and it requires magnification and parallax control to work properly. The 6-18×44 AO delivers both at a price that leaves room for the ammo budget that actually builds skill.
The Adjustable Objective – Why It Matters at This Magnification
The AO parallax adjustment is the feature that earns this scope its slightly higher price compared to the fixed-parallax Crossfire II models. Here’s why it matters at 18x when it doesn’t matter much at 9x.
Parallax error occurs when the reticle and the target image aren’t in the same optical plane – the practical result is that moving your eye slightly off center causes the reticle to appear to shift relative to the target. At low magnification and typical hunting distances, parallax error is small and doesn’t affect practical accuracy. At 18x targeting something at 100 yards with a scope set for 100-yard parallax, the error is negligible. But if you’re shooting a scope set for 100-yard parallax at a target at 50 yards or 300 yards, the parallax error at 18x becomes visible and can affect precision groups.
The AO ring lets you dial out parallax for your specific shooting distance – 50 yards for rimfire, 100 for standard range work, 200-600 for longer-range precision practice. At each distance you turn the ring until the target appears sharp and the parallax disappears. The result is a cleaner, more precise sight picture that makes tight groups possible at varied distances.
For casual hunting use, you’d never notice the difference. For shooting small targets at specific distances with any precision intent – this is the feature that makes the 6-18×44 worth buying over the 4-12×44.
Glass and Optical Performance at 18x
The Crossfire II glass holds up well through 12-14x – clear, reasonably bright, competitive with the alternatives in the price range. At 18x you’ll see the limits of entry-level glass: some edge softening, a tighter exit pupil that’s less forgiving of imperfect eye placement, and more sensitivity to heat mirage on warm days. This is expected at the price and not unique to the Crossfire II – every scope under $300 with this magnification range has the same characteristic.
For a precision trainer or varmint scope, the practical implication is straightforward: shoot at 14-16x for the clearest, most stable image in most conditions. Use 18x when you have ideal lighting, stable conditions, and a solid rest. The glass is honest and capable within those parameters – you’re not fighting it, you’re just using it appropriately.
The 44mm objective is adequate for this magnification range in good daylight. At 18x the exit pupil is around 2.4mm – workable in daylight but not a low-light performer. This scope is a daytime tool for bench work, varmint shooting, and precision practice rather than a dawn-and-dusk hunting scope.
Dead-Hold BDC at 18x
The BDC reticle is less central to how most shooters will use this scope compared to the hunting models in the lineup. At 18x on a precision trainer or varmint rifle, the typical workflow is to know your load’s specific dope and either dial the capped turrets or hold from memory – not use generic BDC marks calibrated for an average hunting cartridge.
That said, the BDC provides useful starting references for a shooter who is building their understanding of bullet drop for the first time. Running a .308 Win load at factory velocities, the BDC marks give you a working approximation of drop at 200, 300, and 400 yards that you can refine with real range data. For a first precision trainer scope, that framework has genuine educational value.
For varmint shooting with a flat-shooting cartridge like .22-250 or .223 Rem, the BDC marks calibrated for standard hunting loads won’t correspond to your trajectory at all – you’re better off knowing your specific dope and using the crosshair center as your reference. In either case, the AO parallax adjustment and the 18x magnification are the real reasons to buy this scope, not the BDC reticle.
How It Compares to the Competition
Within the Crossfire lineup – the 4-12×44
The Crossfire II 4-12×44 reviewed separately on this site costs $153-180 and is the natural step below. The key differences: the 6-18×44 AO gives you 18x versus 12x at the top end, and the adjustable objective for parallax control. For a hunting rifle used at field distances, the 4-12×44 is the right choice – 12x is sufficient, fixed parallax is fine, and it’s lighter. For a dedicated precision trainer or varmint rifle where you want to shoot small targets at varied distances and see your impacts clearly – the 6-18×44 AO is the more capable tool and worth the extra $50-70.
Same tier ($220-$320) – Primary Arms SLx 4-14×44 FFP / Burris Fullfield E1 4.5-14×42
The Primary Arms SLx 4-14×44 FFP at $230-300 is a first focal plane scope with accurate subtensions at any magnification – a meaningfully different design philosophy from the Crossfire II’s SFP setup. At 14x maximum it has less top-end reach than the 6-18×44 AO, but the FFP design makes holdover marks accurate throughout the magnification range rather than only at max power. For a shooter who is working toward serious precision technique and wants reticle subtensions that always match the turret adjustments, FFP is the right design choice and the Primary Arms SLx is a legitimate option at this price.
The Burris Fullfield E1 4.5-14×42 at $230-300 delivers better glass than the Crossfire II at comparable magnification – cleaner contrast at 14x and a more refined image quality that experienced shooters notice. It doesn’t offer the same top-end magnification as the 6-18×44 AO, but the optical quality is a step up. For a shooter where image quality matters more than maximum magnification, Burris is worth the comparison.
Choose the Crossfire II 6-18×44 AO if: maximum magnification and the AO parallax adjustment are the priorities, and the Vortex VIP warranty matters to your buying decision.
Step-up ($300-$450) – Bushnell Match Pro 6-24×50 / Vortex Diamondback 4-16×44
Spending $80-150 more opens up meaningfully better glass with more capability. The Bushnell Match Pro 6-24×50 at $300-400 is designed specifically for the precision shooter and entry-level competition market – exposed turrets with a zero-stop, a 50mm objective for better high-power image quality, and more top-end magnification at 24x. For a shooter who has decided they’re serious about precision rifle work and wants a scope that matches that commitment without spending $700+, the Match Pro is a strong option and frequently recommended as the best value in the entry-precision category.
The Vortex Diamondback 4-16×44 at $300-380 stays within the Vortex lineup but brings significantly better HD glass, a first focal plane option, and a more refined optical system than the Crossfire II. For a shooter who wants to stay in the Vortex ecosystem but is ready to move past entry-level glass, the Diamondback is the honest upgrade path.
Choose the step-up tier if: you’ve decided on precision shooting as a serious pursuit and want a scope that grows with your skill level rather than one you’ll want to replace in 12-18 months.
Mid-precision ($400-$600) – Athlon Argos BTR 6-24×50 FFP / Leupold VX-Freedom 6-18×40
Above $400, the precision scope category gets genuinely interesting. The Athlon Argos BTR 6-24×50 FFP at $350-450 offers first focal plane design, more magnification, a 50mm objective, and Athlon’s lifetime warranty at a price that seriously challenges everything below it on features per dollar. The glass is competitive with scopes that cost more, and the FFP design with a solid reticle makes it a capable entry-level competition scope. Athlon doesn’t have Vortex’s dealer network, but the product competes honestly at its price point.
The Leupold VX-Freedom 6-18×40 at $350-450 brings Leupold’s optical quality and proven field reliability to this magnification range. Leupold’s glass reputation is built on decades of hunting and precision shooting use, and the VX-Freedom line delivers that heritage at accessible prices. For a shooter who values optical quality and brand confidence over maximum feature count, Leupold is always worth checking before you decide.
Real-World Use
On a .22-250 or .223 varmint rifle for prairie dogs, ground squirrels, or coyotes at 100-500 yards – the 6-18×44 AO is a natural fit. Dial the parallax for your typical shooting distance, pick a power in the 14-16x range, and you have a clear, precise sight picture for small targets at real varmint distances. The AO parallax adjustment is the feature that makes varmint shooting at 200-400 yards genuinely precise rather than approximately right.
On a .308 Win or 6.5 Creedmoor precision trainer for a shooter learning long-range fundamentals – the 18x and parallax adjustment let you see your impacts at 300-500 yards, call corrections, and build understanding of wind and drop in a way that a 9x fixed-parallax scope simply can’t support. That feedback loop is how long-range shooting skills actually develop.
On a bench rifle used for load development and group testing at 100-300 yards – the parallax adjustment eliminates a source of precision error that matters when you’re trying to measure 0.5 MOA group differences between loads.
The Bottom Line
The Vortex Crossfire II 6-18×44 AO is the right scope at the right price for a specific set of tasks: varmint shooting, precision training, and bench work where 18x and parallax control are genuine requirements rather than nice-to-haves. At $220-260 street price it delivers those capabilities with the Vortex VIP warranty at a cost that makes sense on a dedicated training or varmint rifle.
If you’re planning to progress toward serious precision shooting, the Bushnell Match Pro 6-24×50 or Athlon Argos BTR are worth the extra $80-150 as platforms that will serve you longer before you want to upgrade again. If the 6-18×44 AO’s price point is where your budget is and the use case matches – it’s an honest, capable tool that will teach you what you need to learn.
Quick Specs
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
| Magnification | 6-18x |
| Objective lens | 44 mm |
| Tube diameter | 1 inch (25.4 mm) |
| Focal plane | Second focal plane (SFP) |
| Reticle | Dead-Hold BDC (MOA) |
| Turrets | Capped – 1/4 MOA adjustments |
| Parallax | Adjustable objective (AO) – side focus or front ring |
| Weatherproofing | O-ring sealed, argon-purged |
| Warranty | Vortex VIP – lifetime, unconditional, transferable |
| Typical street price | $220-$260 depending on retailer |
How It Stacks Up Against Competitors
| Scope | Magnification | Price range | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vortex Crossfire II 4-12×44 | 4-12x | $153-$180 | Hunting use, no parallax adj needed |
| Primary Arms SLx 4-14×44 FFP | 4-14x | $230-$300 | FFP design, precision-capable reticle |
| Burris Fullfield E1 4.5-14×42 | 4.5-14x | $230-$300 | Better glass quality at similar price |
| Vortex Crossfire II 6-18×44 AO | 6-18x | $220-$260 | Varmint, precision trainer, AO parallax, VIP warranty |
| Bushnell Match Pro 6-24×50 | 6-24x | $300-$400 | Entry precision competition, exposed turrets |
| Athlon Argos BTR 6-24×50 FFP | 6-24x | $350-$450 | FFP, more magnification, competition-ready |
| Vortex Diamondback 4-16×44 | 4-16x | $300-$380 | HD glass step-up within Vortex lineup |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does the adjustable objective (AO) actually do and how do I use it?
The adjustable objective is a parallax adjustment ring – typically on the objective bell at the front of the scope – that lets you dial out parallax error for your specific shooting distance. To use it: with the scope at your intended magnification setting, look through the scope at your target and shift your eye slightly side to side. If the reticle appears to move relative to the target, parallax is present. Turn the AO ring until the reticle stays still when you shift your eye – that’s the correct setting for that distance. Most AO rings have distance markings (50yd, 100yd, 200yd, etc.) as starting references, but dialing it visually until parallax disappears is more accurate than relying on the markings alone. You only need to adjust it when you significantly change your shooting distance.
Is this scope good for rimfire precision shooting?
Yes – the AO parallax adjustment makes it genuinely useful for rimfire at the close distances where fixed-parallax scopes show their limits. A scope set for 100-yard parallax has noticeable parallax error at 25-50 yards at 18x, which can cause apparent reticle movement that affects precision groups. The AO ring lets you dial for 25 or 50 yards and eliminate that error. At 18x you can see .22 LR impacts on a target at 50-100 yards clearly enough to call your shots and make corrections. The weight and size of the 6-18×44 are larger than a dedicated rimfire scope, but the performance is there. For a .22 LR benchrest or precision trainer setup, this scope is a capable and affordable option.
How does this compare to the Bushnell Match Pro 6-24×50 for someone getting into precision shooting?
The Bushnell Match Pro 6-24×50 at $300-400 is a meaningful step up and is frequently recommended as the best value entry point for serious precision shooting. The Match Pro adds exposed tactical turrets with a zero-stop for dialing corrections – the feature that makes precision competition practical – along with a 50mm objective for better high-power image quality and 24x maximum magnification. If you’ve decided precision rifle competition is where you’re headed, the Match Pro is worth the extra $80-140 over the Crossfire II because it gives you the turret system you’ll actually need for that use. If you’re still deciding whether precision shooting is your direction and want to learn the fundamentals on a budget before committing – the Crossfire II 6-18×44 AO teaches you everything you need to know at a lower entry cost.
What is the best magnification to use on this scope for 300-500 yard shooting?
In most conditions, 14-16x delivers the best balance of magnification and image quality in the 300-500 yard range. At 18x the image is technically more magnified but also more sensitive to mirage distortion, heat shimmer, and the slight image softening that shows up at max power on entry-level glass. Dial to 16x on a warm day and the image often looks cleaner and more stable than at 18x. Use 18x when conditions are ideal – cool, calm, good light – and you’re trying to see maximum detail. For 300-yard bench work in typical conditions, 14x is often the sweet spot. Adjust the AO parallax ring whenever you change your shooting distance significantly for the cleanest possible sight picture.
Can I use this scope for hunting as well as precision and varmint work?
Technically yes, but it’s not the optimal hunting scope and there are better choices in the Crossfire II lineup for that purpose. The 6x minimum is the main limitation – in thick cover or at close range, 6x is less versatile than the 3x or 4x minimum on the hunting models. The scope is also heavier and longer than the 3-9×40 or 4-12×44, which adds up on a rifle you’re carrying all day. For open-country varmint hunting at longer distances where you’re set up on a position and shooting at small targets at specific known distances – it works very well. For general deer hunting where shots happen at varied distances and you might need to shoot quickly at 50 yards or precisely at 350 yards in the same day, the 4-12×44 is the more versatile field choice.
What’s the difference between an AO (adjustable objective) and a side-focus parallax adjustment?
Both serve the same purpose – eliminating parallax at your shooting distance – but they’re located differently on the scope. An AO (adjustable objective) ring is on the objective bell at the front of the scope. Side-focus parallax adjusts from a knob on the left side of the turret area. Side-focus is more convenient to use without shifting your hand position or grip on the rifle, which is why it’s preferred on precision and tactical scopes where you might adjust parallax frequently during a shooting session. AO is more common on budget and mid-tier scopes and works equally well mechanically – it’s just less ergonomically convenient if you’re adjusting often. For bench work and varmint shooting where you set the AO for a specific distance and leave it, the front-ring AO on the Crossfire II is perfectly practical.



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