The choice of an optical sight, the more functions the better! A cheap sight should be simpler and more practical. If an optical sight of 30$ has all functions, it is basically a toy. What kind of optical path system and what kind of stability are all terrible, that is, it only has an appearance! And the workmanship is very poor!
It's not that the higher the aiming magnification, the better. Generally, 4-16 times is basically the limit. For veterans, basically 3-9 times is enough! The higher the magnification, the smaller the field of view, the higher the magnification, the easier to see things shake
Aiming is generally divided into zoom, fixed magnification, rear and front, fixed magnification is relatively simple, as long as you master the aiming point, it is generally aimed at novice or close-range combat group, if it is the premise of real magnification, 4 times can generally be used Within 70 meters, the best is 10-50 meters, 6 times is suitable for 12-80 meters
How to master the magnification and aiming point for the rear/second focal plane sight? In fact, the absolute mainstream is the rare/second focal plane sight. Many friends think that there is an error in the rear focal plane, and the zoom will be inaccurate. In fact, it is wrong. We use 6 times for short distances and 12 times for long distances (usually we don't need the highest magnification). For example, we calibrate the sight. After calibration, we use 12 times to shoot to see which dense point it is! You fix two magnifications, low magnification at close range and high magnification at long distance. Don't change the magnification at will. You can master the aiming points of the two magnifications.
For the front sight, the reticle will change with the zoom, and the aiming point from the lowest to the highest will remain unchanged. For example, if we see a target at 6 times, we need to increase the density point by one grid, but the thing is relatively small and needs to be observed at high magnification. , directly zoom to the high magnification state, the aiming point remains unchanged or the dense point is increased by one grid! For those who like long-distance sniping (at least the accuracy of 40-meter coins is stable), long-distance is very advantageous, but the front reticle is very thin in low-power state, so it is not suitable for close-range or night use
Contact Person: Miss. Allie Nie
Tel: 18215595193
Fax: 86-28-89346527