This idea is too much akin to that "virtual hunting" concept, where you control an actual firearm by remote control from your own living room and can actually harvest game across the continent. If BR competition is going the way of lasers and mini-monitors, well then count me out. How about inventing a target material that one could measure bullet holes more precisely instead.
This idea is too much akin to that "virtual hunting" concept, where you control an actual firearm by remote control from your own living room and can actually harvest game across the continent. If BR competition is going the way of lasers and mini-monitors, well then count me out. How about inventing a target material that one could measure bullet holes more precisely instead.
Well, I am a bit surprised at some of the responses, that is for sure.
Hello Boyd!
I am in the final testing phase now with the 3rd prototype. I have never shot it in competition, but looking forward to. The testing so far has been very surprising as far as multiple target acquisition with fixed magnification and near dark conditions. Very fast acquisition's with constant clarity
Tim
Fast target acquisition isn't a part of this game.
However I already have a heads up display for my weapon. Its called an EOTECH.
Fast target acquisition isn't a part of this game.
However I already have a heads up display for my weapon. Its called an EOTECH.
There is a saying common in engineering: "You can tell the pioneers, they are the ones facedown on the ground with arrows in their backs." Proposing something new and different, always, with out fail, will evoke responses from encouragement to total rejection and redicule. It's just how it is, and here is clearly no exception.
There are new computerized laser rangefinding scopes on the market now. I haven't purchased one because they aren't yet enough of an improvement on a bullet drop reticle, but they will get better and better, the price will come down, and the day may come that they are more common than conventional scopes on long range rifles used to shoot where distances are not known with precision in advance. There are scopes with a camera in them that displays on a monitor in the eyepiece which would seem to take the eye alignment out of the process while retaining the benefits of magnification. The Holographic scopes do this too, but with no magnification.
I don't think I need a heads up display for ground hog or deer hunting, but I'll be interested to see pictures of your setup and read reviews on it. I might find it useful, especially if it gives me a bigger image to aid my aging eyes. Who knows?
Good luck with this gadget.
Fitch
The EOTech Holosight can't record or zoom in, among a few other things... ;-)
Tim,
I have one on a H&K 93. I was curious to see how other people like theirs. It is strictly a quick aquisition sight and I like the idea that you don't have to be positioned directly behind it to put bullets on target. The sight does what it was designed to do very well.
That "thwak!" you just heard was me slapping my forehead (probably why it is bereft of cranial foliage).
A heads up display that allowed one to have the weapon, a 12ga for example, at the hip and aim it would be a huge advantage in a HD situation, or for LEO's doing an entry to suspected hostile territory. If it worked like a true heads up display, one could have both eyes open looking around and still see the display so it could be used for aiming the hip held assault weapon. That would be a huge tactical advantage.
Ted,
How do you like yours?