Bitbyte
Member
I had to laugh. I was looking up their contact information. They are located in Yankeetown, Florida. hahaha
I had to laugh. I was looking up their contact information. They are located in Yankeetown, Florida. hahaha
Dang if that ain't irony!![]()
Hm, I think I'll give them a call and see if I can get them to divulge who in Japan makes them.
The FastFire is the one I saw that was in my price range, but I've never laid my hands on one. What are your impressions?
My under $50 sightmark works very well... I think, however, if I were inclined to drop $200 on another sight, I would find a lot of good choices from either Primary Arms or RRages... and rest comfortable in the knowledge that either seller would make things right in the unlikely event that the product turned out to be a ***.
It's a whole lot better than anything mentioned in this thread so far. I've been very happy with mine and would buy it again. Keep in mind that it is a small sight, so get a riser for it. However, the frame around the lens is very low profile so it does not affect field of view during shooting.
Now if Ultradot would make a Pan AV with multiple dot sizes, like the Match Dot, I'd get another one.
Have you had to deal with Burris customer service yet? I've read lots of bad things and that was kind of why I shyed away from it.
Burris FF are typically mounted on handguns, sometimes shotguns, or mounted as a secondary optic with a magnified scope on an AR platform. Don't see many people using them as a primary sight on an AR platform.
Burris FF are typically mounted on handguns, sometimes shotguns, or mounted as a secondary optic with a magnified scope on an AR platform. Don't see many people using them as a primary sight on an AR platform.
The dot on my SightMark is about 2MOA and sharp as a tac. It does, however, fade out in direct sunlight.
Bitbyte..............Now you are getting a little feedback from the owners of the Chinese copies. Pretty much everything I mentioned. I shoot bullseye pistol, and my group of shooters is probably a bit more demanding than most. Ultradot products pretty much rule the roost. I've been shooting red dots since the late 80's, so I've checked out a bunch of them. If you are looking for a very good tube style red dot, look no further than the older made in Japan Tasco PDP3. Tasco was one of the first companies to produce this type of sight. The Japanese made ones were of excellent quality. The dots are consistently round due to the good lens coatings. The polarizing filter that comes with these is actually made by sandwiching the filter between two layers of optical glass. Just like a proper pair of good sunglasses or a camera filter. You can find these older PDP3's on Ebay for $30-50 new in the box. Another reason I like these red dots, is that they have the widest field of view of any 30mm dot sight out there. They are even superior to the Ultradot 30mm sights in this regard.
I saw your link to the reticle display. What I am talking about is simply a choice of single dot size: 2-4-6-8 minute just like in the Ultradot Match Dot. Us bullseye shooters have no use for crosshairs, circles around dots, etc. If you are looking to do some "precision plinking", all you need is a sharply defined dot that is reasonably small. The human eye is naturally drawn to focus on a dot. Once you learn to see through the dot and focus on that X behind the dot, you are getting into the zen of bullseye shooting.
Keep in mind, that going cheap on any optical sight usually results in money wasted on ammo that is not being used to it's full potential.
CPTBreaker. Do you own this sight? Looks interesting. I was hoping to avoid a tube type because my two young kids struggle with getting a good sight alignment on tube type optics. I'm not sure how much of that's an issue with 1x magnification though.