JMO but trying to buy three exact scopes for three very different guns may not work. I only have one sfp with an illuminated reticle which is set up on an Mrod which I use for shooting coons off my patio at about 10 feet at night. I like the sfp here as I set a bait and shoot the coon at a preplanned spot/distance. To kill a coon with a .22 air gun takes perfect shot placement. I set a target at the spot I want to shoot the coon and aim for the dot on the target. POI will be low. I then crank my magnification down until one of the mildots are on the pellet hole while holding the crosshair on target. I count the number of mildots I have to hold high and fire another shot with that mildot on target instead of the crosshair to test. When the coon shows up I simply place the second mildot exactly where I want the pellet to go and the coon is dead. This setup works great for this task BUT illuminated reticles are not my thing. You may want to cut cost on one a little and add that savings to a scope going on a different gun. Just so you know both ffp and sfp have their own benefits. Many guys with air rifles use sfp scopes for distance shooting by changing the magnification power at set distances. Good luck, Gary