It’s available with quick-detach mounts, so you can yank it if it’s in the way somehow, and because it manipulates light relative to the shooter, it doesn’t ever need re-zeroing if you take it off and put it back on. It also won’t introduce any kind of parallax effect because the mirror’s flat. It’s not rifle-centric although it’s clearly easier to use in conjunction with other sights or optics, it can be mounted on a pistol rail and used to look around corners.īecause it’s a mirror, it won’t interfere with exotic optics like infrared or night vision systems. It can be rotated 360 degrees in case your gun wants to know what you’re shooting at, and mounts on any Picatinny rail. It’s therefor also waterproof, lightweight, and simple. Now about the cool things: it’s unpowered, so it will never run out of batteries. It might also inadvertantly crop some of the view. Some of the light will pass through it directly and some of it will be angled out at 90 degrees. Because it’s unpowered, the view through the Anglesight is going to be dimmed. Let’s get the downsides of this sort of optic out of the way. The Anglesight is a rotating two-way mirror, a one-power optic that lets you see straight through it and also at 90 degrees away from it. Yeah, this is like Kari’s thing but better. Remember that episode of Mythbusters where the Build Team tested all those different ways action movies have people shooting around corners, like just pointing your gun sideways, which is what Grant did and didn’t hit shit, then Kari used that CornerShot with the Glock and the fiber optic camera to nail the dude using an LCD display, and Tory did just what you’re not supposed to do, which is dive out there and then shoot the guy (successfully) a bunch?
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |